View Full Version : CD Quality
Dave Lindhorst
05-05-2005, 12:22 PM
I have just bought a new CD player (Arcam CD73) and now when listening to CDs I am very critical. I can tell if they sound good or bad about 20 seconds into the song. I am finding that some of the CDs I used to listen to and thought weren't bad now are. The ones I now find to be good are very much better than they were before. As a matter of fact I can't believe how beautiful they sound. It's the bad ones I wish I didn't own now.
What I want to know is if this is a personal perception or is this a common thing to have happen when finally getting a decent CD player?
paul_pci
05-05-2005, 12:37 PM
I have just bought a new CD player (Arcam CD73) and now when listening to CDs I am very critical. I can tell if they sound good or bad about 20 seconds into the song. I am finding that some of the CDs I used to listen to and thought weren't bad now are. The ones I now find to be good are very much better than they were before. As a matter of fact I can't believe how beautiful they sound. It's the bad ones I wish I didn't own now.
What I want to know is if this is a personal perception or is this a common thing to have happen when finally getting a decent CD player?
Yes, it's common. More revealing equipment, be ti players or speakers (usually speakers), will reveal the recording for what it is: crap or astonishing.
Geoffcin
05-05-2005, 02:05 PM
I have just bought a new CD player (Arcam CD73) and now when listening to CDs I am very critical. I can tell if they sound good or bad about 20 seconds into the song. I am finding that some of the CDs I used to listen to and thought weren't bad now are. The ones I now find to be good are very much better than they were before. As a matter of fact I can't believe how beautiful they sound. It's the bad ones I wish I didn't own now.
What I want to know is if this is a personal perception or is this a common thing to have happen when finally getting a decent CD player?
It's not only common, it's expected. Your CD player will get about 95% of what's on the CD to your ears now. Good or bad it's all there for you to hear. Oh, if you want that last 5% be prepared to shell out a lot more cash.
Ps.
Nice CD player!
vr6ofpain
05-05-2005, 03:26 PM
get some good headphones and you will be even more impressed and frustrated by the quality of recordings/formats! :)
hermanv
05-05-2005, 03:36 PM
One can hope that the CD's that sound awful will be a lttle less so when you get a few more hours on your player. In my expereience the biggest change with most equipment break-in is a reduction in harshness.
Of course you still can't make silk purses out of sows' ears. But the good news is that if there is some break-in, those good CDs will sound a little beter yet.
Most equipment seems to enter the end of break-in between 40 and 100 hours of use.
By the way congratulations on catching the audiophile flu, may it leave a some part of your bank account intact:).
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