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  1. #1
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    Cool Equalizer no more?

    I remember it was late 80's and early 90's. Many manufacturers produced equalizers. And many people use them. Including myself. At that time I was playing in the mid-end audio field. Pioneer, Teac, Sansui, Technics are the brands I used to use.
    Now I'm entering what people said to be hi-end audio field. Krell, B&W, KEF, Musical Fidelity, Arcam etc are the brands I'm familiar with. I even have some of them.
    My question is, why theese hi-end manufacturers don't make equalizer? My hi-end vendor said it is due to the nature of eq, they said eq will alter the characteristic and naturality of theese hi-end products. They also said, that theese hi-end products doesn't need equalizing anymore.
    I'm not satisfied with their answer, that's why I humbly ask this forum, why aren't eq is not as popular as before?

    Thanks a lot.

  2. #2
    Pat
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    Hi Yon,
    That salesman gave the answer I have heard the most, but I also know a few guys who swear by them and are very happy with their performance....like the BFD.
    Have a good day.....Sez' Pat
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  3. #3
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    Equalizers, along with dynamic range expanders, all fall into the category of signal processors, or as audiophiles choose to call them, signal disturbers. I once considered this to be nothing more than elitist snobbery, until I too "graduated" into high end components, and found that the system just about always sounded better without an EQ, or any other form of enhancement.

    Manufacturers of high end equipment prefer as little as possible extraneous information getting in the way of the signal path from their equipment to the loudspeakers of a first-rate audio system. Zillions of dollars can be spent on cables to do this, and the insertion of an electronic device of any type along the way is believed to do nothing other than to alter (and, consequently, "distort") the original, "pure" signal.

    Elitist snobbery perhaps, but it's valid. Once you get into the realm of high-end stuff, the system rarely (if ever) sounds better with any form of signal processing. The equipment itself sounds so good that to do anything further to it is almost criminal.

  4. #4
    Nobody Special LeoFenderBender's Avatar
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    Equalizers have their use to enhance or attenuate weaknesses in low-fi to mid-fi equipment. An equalizer attenuates/emphasizes sound at a given frequency.

    Using a higher end preamp will negate most of the need for an equalizer. High end preamps are built with a manufacturer’s “seasoning” that enhances or attenuates the sound at different frequencies; the enhancement/attenuation is designed into the preamp itself; the good ones season the sound not too much and not too little.

    • For example, boosting the bass too much at 16, 31, or at 60Hz will make it sound muddy. Boosting the bass too little at 60Hz makes it sound thin.

    • Boosting too much at 125Hz makes it boomy. Boosting it too little at 125Hz makes it sound thin. When set just right, it will sound full without boominess.

    • Boosting it too much at 250Hz makes it sound like a telephone and adds listening fatigue. Too little and you lose fullness of sound.

    • Boosting it too much at 500Hz makes it sound honky. Boosting 1 to 2KHz sounds tinny. Boost too much of the high mids over 2kHz and you lose speech recognition, add a lisp, and listening fatigue takes over.

    • Boost too much at 6kHz and the vocals hiss, boost too much at 8kHz and you add sibilance.

    I used an equalizer up to and including my Adcom GFP-750 preamp. When I replaced the Adcom with a Krell KRC-3, I soon determined I no longer had need for an equalizer. The Krell doesn't have a preamp on the unit, but the EQ built into and part of the Krell designed circuitry is perfect enough for my ears.
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  5. #5
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    Cool Awesome digitalized freq analysis

    Quote Originally Posted by LeoFenderBender
    • For example, boosting the bass too much at 16, 31, or at 60Hz will make it sound muddy. Boosting the bass too little at 60Hz makes it sound thin.

    • Boosting too much at 125Hz makes it boomy. Boosting it too little at 125Hz makes it sound thin. When set just right, it will sound full without boominess.

    • Boosting it too much at 250Hz makes it sound like a telephone and adds listening fatigue. Too little and you lose fullness of sound.

    • Boosting it too much at 500Hz makes it sound honky. Boosting 1 to 2KHz sounds tinny. Boost too much of the high mids over 2kHz and you lose speech recognition, add a lisp, and listening fatigue takes over.

    • Boost too much at 6kHz and the vocals hiss, boost too much at 8kHz and you add sibilance.

    Woow…these are awesome man. I completely agree with you. I guess at some level I’ve always known that, but I didn’t always aware of it. Since you’ve digitalized that information, from lower to higher freq, it’s all clear to me now.
    This new knowledge will help me to audition any audio equipment in the future.

    Would you mind give me the same analysis on freq 8kHz to 22kHz, please? Thanks

  6. #6
    Nobody Special LeoFenderBender's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by yon_wu

    Woow…these are awesome man. I completely agree with you. I guess at some level I’ve always known that, but I didn’t always aware of it. Since you’ve digitalized that information, from lower to higher freq, it’s all clear to me now.
    This new knowledge will help me to audition any audio equipment in the future.

    Would you mind give me the same analysis on freq 8kHz to 22kHz, please? Thanks
    Boosting the 8kHz to 22kHz range just enough adds air and spaciousness, boost too much and you get a sibilant hiss on vocals.

    This and the other suggestions are from a chart I got from a soundman.
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  7. #7
    M.P.S.E /AES/SMPTE member Sir Terrence the Terrible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by LeoFenderBender
    Equalizers have their use to enhance or attenuate weaknesses in low-fi to mid-fi equipment. An equalizer attenuates/emphasizes sound at a given frequency.
    Man, I thought EQ was used for correcting room related response errors, and not designed to help the equipment at all. Room modes, early and late arriving reflections can wreak terror on a speakers frequency response at the ears, EQ, along with acoustical foam, and a well placed listening position all combine together to improve the overall sound of your system.

    Using a higher end preamp will negate most of the need for an equalizer. High end preamps are built with a manufacturer’s “seasoning” that enhances or attenuates the sound at different frequencies; the enhancement/attenuation is designed into the preamp itself; the good ones season the sound not too much and not too little.
    It is my understanding that preamps should have no seasoning. A well made preamp will have no sonic signature at all. When acoustical abnomalities happen in a room, a preamps is useless in correcting it. It has no way of doing so. Once the sound leaves your speakers, it is at the mercy of the room the speakers sit in.



    I used an equalizer up to and including my Adcom GFP-750 preamp. When I replaced the Adcom with a Krell KRC-3, I soon determined I no longer had need for an equalizer. The Krell doesn't have a preamp on the unit, but the EQ built into and part of the Krell designed circuitry is perfect enough for my ears.
    My question to you would be did your room acoustics change along with the change in components?

    I have to agree with RL, the reason that eq has gotten a bad rap is because people do not understand how to use them, what resolution is necessary in most rooms(1/3 is minimum, several filters of parametric EQ is also a minimum), nor do they understand what constitutes a good quality equalizer. Anything with dancing lights will have audible noise.
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  8. #8
    Forum Regular PAT.P's Avatar
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    Plenty of people dismiss graphic EQs as elaborate tone controls designed to mask a weak choice of components.While it is true a graphic equalizer gives you a ultra -precise tone control ,it could be a good thing.A quality EQ properly used can fine -tuned even a high-end system.An EQ makes the difference by catering to your listening preferences .With a graphic EQ it is easy to reach and clean up your sound by cutting the offending bandwidths.You can use an equalizer to remedy the room ,from floor and furniture by boosting the frequencies you are missing and atternuating the ones that are exaggerates.Im using a Behringer FBQ3102 Ultragraph Pro Ultra Musical 31 band stereo with Feedback Detection.
    Last edited by PAT.P; 11-21-2005 at 12:04 PM.

  9. #9
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    You are right

    Quote Originally Posted by emaidel
    Equalizers, along with dynamic range expanders, all fall into the category of signal processors, or as audiophiles choose to call them, signal disturbers. I once considered this to be nothing more than elitist snobbery, until I too "graduated" into high end components, and found that the system just about always sounded better without an EQ, or any other form of enhancement.
    Yeah I suppose that’s true. Just yesterday I installed my old equalizer - Technics SH-8045 12-band per channel – to my system. At first I jumbled up as I set my eq just like the “good” old time(traditionaly U curve). There was plenty of bass and treble. I used to like this sounding. But not too long after, I realized there was a great deal of detail missing. The music sounded muddy and boomy. The vocals missing its richness, and the highs are piercing. I’ve tried many diferent setting to my eq, but I can’t seem to get it right.
    Today I uninstall my eq, and…voila…!!! There it is again. All the detail and naturality are coming back!

  10. #10
    Music Junkie E-Stat's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by yon_wu
    why aren't eq is not as popular as before?
    They are in certain circles. You can buy a 31 band EQ for under $150. Go for it.

    High end manufacturers have never produced EQs.

    rw

  11. #11
    Silence of the spam Site Moderator Geoffcin's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by yon_wu
    I remember it was late 80's and early 90's. Many manufacturers produced equalizers. And many people use them. Including myself. At that time I was playing in the mid-end audio field. Pioneer, Teac, Sansui, Technics are the brands I used to use.
    Now I'm entering what people said to be hi-end audio field. Krell, B&W, KEF, Musical Fidelity, Arcam etc are the brands I'm familiar with. I even have some of them.
    My question is, why theese hi-end manufacturers don't make equalizer? My hi-end vendor said it is due to the nature of eq, they said eq will alter the characteristic and naturality of theese hi-end products. They also said, that theese hi-end products doesn't need equalizing anymore.
    I'm not satisfied with their answer, that's why I humbly ask this forum, why aren't eq is not as popular as before?

    Thanks a lot.
    EQ, in the form of DSP that's been incorperated into most modern receivers, is MORE popular than ever. Rarely do I play my HT without some form of DSP engaged, and I dare say 95% of HT owners are the same way.

    Audiophiles, on the otherhand, are for the most part "purists" when it comes to audio (I am), and want the least possible alteration of the signal from source to speaker. Also, most high quality systems that I've heard would NOT benefit from EQ, so there's little point in adding one.
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  12. #12
    RGA
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    I have no problems if one wants to use and EQ or not so I'll say this at the outset.

    Some of the reasons why not to use them are you paying big money for an amplifier which has top grade outpouts only to run it into a cheap signal distorting box? Many high priced and some very good manufacters(not necessarily the same thing) believe in removing as many circuits from the signal path as possible -- so adding an EQ which has a myriad of switches goes directly against the goal. The amplifier makers are assuming that you are buying very good speakers and not something that needs to have a bass knob to enhance the bass the speaker should be but does not provide on its own -- the EQ was to tailor bad speakers to make them sound half decent -- if you look at the speakers pioneer was selling with their EQ it made lotsa sense.

    To be able to "HEAR" the effect of a switch on your music all you need to do is play a receiver that has a direct bypass switch (most do) and then set everything to flat 2 channel stereo. Then push the direct button which bypasses all these modes -- you will hear a difference - and that's just one switch. many integrated amps such as my Arcam Delta 290 had a direct switch which bypassed the bass treble knobs. Setting the bass and treble to middle and pushing direct and it was rather a big difference.

    I'm not necessarily against such knobs and controls because many amps(even astonishingly expensive SS amps) sound thin or grainy and it would be nice to have a switch to artificially create ambiance that should be there but seems dynamically compromised by such amps. They may also be useful to help out bad recordings that you want to change because it is more pleasing to you.

    I think when you really find something you like (which is not necessarily stuff magazines endlessly endorse from paid manufacturers) you will not find tione controls of any kind to be at all necessary.

  13. #13
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    U make alotasense

    Quote Originally Posted by RGA
    Some of the reasons why not to use them are you paying big money for an amplifier which has top grade outpouts only to run it into a cheap signal distorting box?
    I never looked it that way, but since you mention it, it makes alotasense to me.
    Quote Originally Posted by RGA
    The EQ was to tailor bad speakers to make them sound half decent -- if you look at the speakers pioneer was selling with their EQ it made lotsa sense.
    Yes, the equalizer i have was purchased the same day the same salesman I bought my Pioneer speakers back in 1989.
    Quote Originally Posted by RGA
    To be able to "HEAR" the effect of a switch on your music all you need to do is play a receiver that has a direct bypass switch (most do) and then set everything to flat 2 channel stereo. Then push the direct button which bypasses all these modes -- you will hear a difference - and that's just one switch. many integrated amps such as my Arcam Delta 290 had a direct switch which bypassed the bass treble knobs. Setting the bass and treble to middle and pushing direct and it was rather a big difference.
    Been there done that, and again you are right.
    Quote Originally Posted by RGA
    I think when you really find something you like (which is not necessarily stuff magazines endlessly endorse from paid manufacturers) you will not find tone controls of any kind to be at all necessary.
    As I search the hi-end vendors, not one of them amps have tone control...!

  14. #14
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by RGA
    I have no problems if one wants to use and EQ or not so I'll say this at the outset.

    Some of the reasons why not to use them are you paying big money for an amplifier which has top grade outpouts only to run it into a cheap signal distorting box? Many high priced and some very good manufacters(not necessarily the same thing) believe in removing as many circuits from the signal path as possible -- so adding an EQ which has a myriad of switches goes directly against the goal. The amplifier makers are assuming that you are buying very good speakers and not something that needs to have a bass knob to enhance the bass the speaker should be but does not provide on its own -- the EQ was to tailor bad speakers to make them sound half decent -- if you look at the speakers pioneer was selling with their EQ it made lotsa sense.
    Unfortunately, the role of the equalizer got perverted into a glorified tone control. Until the last few years and the current rennaissance with digital parametric equalization, the actual role of the equalizer (correcting for gross anomalies in the speaker response curve and with the room acoustics) has been lost over the past couple of decades. A good equalizer will add minimal distortions and noise into the signal path, but make tremendous improvements by evening out the extremities that the room and/or speakers can create.

    Quote Originally Posted by RGA
    To be able to "HEAR" the effect of a switch on your music all you need to do is play a receiver that has a direct bypass switch (most do) and then set everything to flat 2 channel stereo. Then push the direct button which bypasses all these modes -- you will hear a difference - and that's just one switch. many integrated amps such as my Arcam Delta 290 had a direct switch which bypassed the bass treble knobs. Setting the bass and treble to middle and pushing direct and it was rather a big difference.
    That's simply because the tone controls and other signal altering circuitry on analog amplifiers in their "zero" states more often than not were not flat. The bypass switch creates an audible change because the zero positions on the tone controls and other switches were never a true zero to begin with.

    Quote Originally Posted by RGA
    I think when you really find something you like (which is not necessarily stuff magazines endlessly endorse from paid manufacturers) you will not find tione controls of any kind to be at all necessary.
    Subject of course to room and listening conditions, and preferences.

  15. #15
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    The main reason...

    ...EQs get a bad rap is they are used incorrectly...As in your case, the "smiley-face"(thanx markw) U-curve is the culprit...setting them up by "eye" is far worse than doing it "by ear".

    EQs aren't really tone controls per se...IMNSHO trying to adjust more than a four or five-band unit simply by ear alone is a fool's errand. You need, at very least, a calibrated noise source and an analog SPL meter...but let's digress a bit...

    Starting on a very basic level, you must attempt to have your loudspeakers AND listening room exist in a synergistically coherent manner...No EQing is going to be able to overcome gross FR deviations; these must be minimized mechanically before any electronic means should even be attempted...it's when boost or cut levels deviate too far from zero that EQs will misbehave.

    The other problem that can be avoided when using an EQ as intended, is using it as a gain device. Set up correctly, when it is switched it in and out of the signal path, there should be a change in timbre not level...if your overall reference level is 85dB, it should remain at that point...if it isn't something is wrong. There is meaning to the word "equalizer".

    A few general rules...ten-bands or better(half octave, third-octave, etc.)...two individual channels(for stereo) are a must; ganged EQs are really a waste of time, as rarely(if ever) are both loudspeakers response curves exactly the same...and remember they aren't tone controls, they're intended to be carefully set to arrive at that room synergy I spoke of earlier and left alone! Any tweaking for program material inadequacies should be left to your tone controls, that is what they are for.

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  16. #16
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
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    Aside from the knee-jerk resistance to any kind of signal alteration from a lot of self-described audiophiles (which I always find amusing given that the proper use of an equalizer is to correct for room induced issues, which can be far greater in magnitude than any coloration that a decent equalizer will add to the signal), even with the entry level and middle market, it's increasing difficult to find equipment that will even take an equalizer in the first place. That's simply an outcome of the market shift from two-channel analog receivers and amplifiers to multichannel digital AV receivers/amps. Multichannel receivers typically handle the majority of the audio signals in the digital domain, whereas most outboard equalizers work in the analog domain.

    Equalizers from 10 years ago typically required either a premain coupler or a tape monitor switch -- common features in two-channel analog receivers/amps. But, nearly all multichannel receivers/amps lack those types of analog signal bypasses, and multichannel now dominates the overall market.

    However, the decline of outboard graphic equalizers does not mean that equalization is dead as a concept. If anything, the state of the art with equalization has moved very rapidly in the last few years, and parametric equalization is increasingly common and much more useful for the actual objective of an equalizer (not to serve as a glorified tone control, but as a tool for adjust the sound to the acoustical properties of a room and to even out the extremes in a speaker's frequency response). Unlike graphic EQs that use fixed center frequencies and bandwidths, parametric equalizers allow users to adjust the center frequency and the bandwidth being controlled.

    More and more receivers have added automatic room calibration features that use built-in digital parametric equalizers that automatically equalize the output to compensate for anomalies in the speakers and room-induced acoustical effects. In addition, word about the advantages of using a parametric equalizer with an active subwoofer has spread, and now you have an increasing number of subwoofer manufacturers adding parametric EQ filters to their subs (i.e. Infinity, Velodyne, Rocket, Adire, and SVS). The sound quality improvement that properly done equalization can produce can be staggering.

    In the future, you'll see more auto calibrating speaker systems with digital crossovers, and more advanced room correcting functions incorporated into receivers and amplifiers. You won't see too many equalizers as standalone units, but more equalization functions incorporated into the receivers/processors and speakers. All of this further addresses what equalizers have always been intended to address -- correcting for large deviations created by the room acoustics.

  17. #17
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    There is absolutely no place for EQ's in a high end stereo.The better Pre-amps don't even provide tone controls.Be happy with the salesman's explanation and invest your money into better components or speakers.

  18. #18
    Forum Regular PAT.P's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BillyB
    There is absolutely no place for EQ's in a high end stereo.The better Pre-amps don't even provide tone controls.Be happy with the salesman's explanation and invest your money into better components or speakers.
    To each their own.I have very good speakers ,Energy ,Paradigm ,Dahlquist upstairs .Now I listen more music on cheap Jbl and Yamaha speaker and 25+ year old 2 channel receiver.Listen to your saleman, buy Monster cable and Bose speakers.

  19. #19
    M.P.S.E /AES/SMPTE member Sir Terrence the Terrible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BillyB
    There is absolutely no place for EQ's in a high end stereo.The better Pre-amps don't even provide tone controls.Be happy with the salesman's explanation and invest your money into better components or speakers.
    You obviously don't have a basic understanding of the acoustics of a room, or the tools that can either correct them totally, or make them at least inoffensive to the ear.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
    You obviously don't have a basic understanding of the acoustics of a room, or the tools that can either correct them totally, or make them at least inoffensive to the ear.
    You have listed an impressive list of Home theatre audio products. Home theatre is certainly geared towards endless sound adjustments.2 channel stereo is a totally different animal. Do you use an EQ or other equipment for altering your conventional HiFi stereo sound. Do you even care about the pure sound of an unaltered high end stereo.You didn't really say.

  21. #21
    Forum Regular gonefishin's Avatar
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    Best sound I've gotten is using a DEQX-p. Best I've heard or had in my system so far. It's only two channel by the way, BillyB

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    Quote Originally Posted by gonefishin
    Best sound I've gotten is using a DEQX-p. Best I've heard or had in my system so far. It's only two channel by the way, BillyB

    dan
    I went to the website for your sound calibration Pre-amp.It's an interesting concept.I just wonder if the $4000 (If you indeed spent that much)should just be put into even better equipment with no sound altering.That being said,you are obviously into your stereo and I don't doubt that it sounds great.Enjoy it!!

  23. #23
    M.P.S.E /AES/SMPTE member Sir Terrence the Terrible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BillyB
    You have listed an impressive list of Home theatre audio products. Home theatre is certainly geared towards endless sound adjustments.2 channel stereo is a totally different animal. Do you use an EQ or other equipment for altering your conventional HiFi stereo sound. Do you even care about the pure sound of an unaltered high end stereo.You didn't really say.
    Billy,
    Hometheater is no more geared to endless sound adjustments than two channel stereo(which is a distortion in and of itself). Fortunately because I chose my components and speakers carefully, two channel sounds as good as multichannel in terms of sound quality. Do your realize that if you have loud modes(room induced peaks) in your room you are already altering the sound quality. The object of EQ(along with other acoustical tools)is to remove such peaks. If you think for a second that your room is not subject to the laws of small room acoustics, you are sorely mistaken. ALL small rooms have acoustical problem of some sort and need to use some sort of acoustical correction tools.

    I placed my listening viewing seat for optimum imaging and viewing, measured the frequency response of my system at that place, used acoustical foam to tame a high frequency slap echo, and my EQ's for the low end, and I have never touched it again. No endless tweaking here. If the recording doesn't sound good, it has to stand on its own in my room.

    Unless you sit VERY near your speakers, there is no such thing as unaltered music in small rooms
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