Digital, Low Mass, ClassD, Less expensive, Let it happen!


Well here we are! Not that you can't go back and buy boat anchors, but now we know sound is better with low mass designs. Digital source? Yep, the tide has turned. ClassD amplification is also here to stay. Lower mass speakers, on their way back too. The audiophile hobby is getting less expensive and better sounding.

I guess we can debate this, but it's happening anyway. The hobby is simply growing up and becoming more aware of how to get great sound, and get it smart. There has been a lot of myths passed down when we only had paperback magazines, mostly for marketing, but the internet has finally caught up with audio reality. Instead of $20,000.00 components we have $20,000.00 whole systems (including all the trimming). Shoot, there are $5,000.00 systems that excel. The Trade Shows are changing, the market is changing and we are changing. Want to stay old school? No problem, there will always be old school and plenty of used gear (at least for our lifetimes). There will also be smaller niche companies that spring up to tempt us.

The hobby is entering a new era for the extreme listener. It will be a hobby of doing and exploring Electrical, Mechanical and Acoustical as equals. Components will be much smaller and more flexible, and more time will be spent on playing our whole music collection, and not just a few recordings. Many HEA debates will be making their way to the archives as the hobby grows closer to mainstream. Mainstream as in higher quality audiophile mainstream.

Are you ready? I sure am!

Michael Green


http://www.michaelgreenaudio.net/

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Showing 7 responses by geoffkait

I am definitely on board the whole free wheelin’ low mass train 🚂 Toot! Toot! Not counting my elaborate seismic iso stand, which is quite massive and tricked out, the system itself is only 24 ounces, including Grado headphones and Panasonic portable CD player, made in Japan. Obviously when you go very low mass as I have you not only shed a lot of pounds but a lot of things that produce noise and distortion.
One wonders if low mass speakers refer to the total mass or just the diaphragm. The flagship Martin Logan’s come in at 280 lb per pair. The big Sound Labs A-1s tip the scales at 370 lb per pair. Is that really considered low mass? Hmmmmm...
My fav all-around system by a considerable amount, if I have to choose one, is my Ultra Light portable Sony Walkman cassette player with Grado SR-60 headphones (which I made even lighter by removing the really horrid sounding ear pads, whose brilliant idea were those? ). Dynamic, engaging, musical! Total mass 14 ounces. I’m not hot doggin ya. 🌭
That’s weird. There have been what, 50,000 fancy audiophile fuses sold in the past five years or so? One assumes those fancy fuses are not going into some hunk of junk amplifier. 
Let it all hang loose. I went from full range Fulton speaker system to Class A all tube headphone system with World’s Most Modded Oppo to a very simple battery-powered Walkman CD system with original Sony Ultralight Walkman Headphones, all in the course of ten years. In the process I eliminated House AC, AC ground, wall outlets, wall outlet plates, power cords, fuses, interconnects, speakers, speaker cables, big honking transformers, a boatload of microprocessors, isolation systems, and room treatments.

And the sound is better in almost every respect. You dump a lot of noise and distortion along the way. If you could hear what I’ve heard with my ears.

No more pencils, no more books, no more teacher’s dirty looks.
Those vintage Sony Walkman lightweight headphones are worth their weight in gold. I just sold a pair for $75. That’s more than new Grados. Reason? Sound quality. Metaphors be with you. 👻 👻 👻 You might think you know something but you don’t.