Does treble response beyond my hearing matter?


Been thinking about getting my hearing checked. Used to get it checked annually when I was in the Air Force, but that been a couple of decades ago.

Thinking about making some changes in my system so when looking at speakers, does treble response beyond my hearing matter?
finsup
If I am interpreting accurately what you mean, frequency response matters beyond the range of human hearing. Amplification with a wide frequency response is generally accepted to mean a greater linearity (sound quality) in sound reproduction. Most audio gear extends fr beyound the range of human hearing so that what you do hear sounds better.
Yes, first you buy an amplifier with super-wide bandwidth and then buy Transparent cables to limit the bandwidth.
IMO, the way you are approaching this is putting you straight on the road to audio hell. Everyone does the same thing - they buy products that are "revealing", "detailed", "heard things I never heard before", supertweeters your dog can hear, etc. Then they come on to A'gon and bitch how their systems are bright and harsh.

Just listen to some speakers and buy what sounds good. Don't worry about the specs. All of the speakers you could reasonably buy go out as high as you need them to go. If you can't trust your own ears, then find someone whose ears you do trust and let him pick the speakers for you.
Mapman, why? Even if I can't hear above a certain frequency, in the range that I do hear, wouldn't having a higher treble response add to "air" or sparkle? I think that is what Arnettpartnetrs was alluding to, or at least in part.

I'll certainly listen to speakers, but some that I am considering are ID. Some have great shipping/return policies while other are just fair so I'm looking for ways to reasonably narrow the field.
I wish I could find the link, but I was reading something the other day on hi resolution audio and it talked about why Redbook CD is more than adequate to exceed the human capacity for hearing. The interesting thing was that the high res media could include things behind the range of human hearing but in some systems it could actually cause distortion in the audible range. It seems that higher could do nothing if you can't hear it, but could add distortion within the audible range under some circumstances.

Don't worry about what you can't hear, just judge based on what you can.