what are the thoughts of stand alone super tweeter


i want to buy a pair of totally stand alone super tweeters, with all necessary parts built into the super tweeter, just place it on top of my speakers and run speaker cables to piggyback my present speakers connections or even come off my power amp.please tell me pros and cons. price seems to be from $500-$3000 except for the radio shack built years ago.which sell for about $80.00 used........... audiogon has the high end ones all the time, is it worth my money... regards forevermusic414
forevermusic414
I also studied psychology, undergraduate major , Graduate work at Chicago and 2 years of Psychoanalytic training and I recognize certain symptoms in your responses which lead me to the conclusion that it is you who cannot brook disagreement with the conclusions you have already reached. When your pronouncements are questions you descend into name calling. If you do not care what I think why are you so upset about it? I will not enter such a contest as vituperation is not one of my skills. I will only point out that what you THINK you hear is not data and simply declaring something to be so is not making sense of it.
Well it has been great fun watching this thread, particularly as it teeters on the edge of incivility.

In my previous post, I proposed that the supertweeter operates by interacting with audible frequencies. It does not need to be in the audible range itself to so this. However, if there is some overlap, that would not change my proposition as to what is happening.

I found Stanwal's information from Martin Colloms to be quite interesting. I haven't read the source material of Mr. Colloms, so I will rely on Stanwal's report to be an accurate reproduction.

In the report of Mr. Colloms, it is stated: "the test for response extension benefit will only be valid if the extended response is achieved without affecting
the performance in the existing ‘audible’ range'." He then goes on to state some reasons why audible range performance is, in fact, affected. This would support my propostion that despite the supertweeter being inaudible itself, there are interactions that produce effects in the audible range, although there seem to be more effects than I originally thought.

This is good stuff, and I am happy to see these comments from a person who is certainly more authoritative in the science of audio than I am.

The report further states: "Testing for a subtle effect, which may well be barely audible, is a manifest nonsense if it changes the uniformity and loudness in the already operative treble range. Yet this is what is happening in these tests. So far, no commercially available add-on tweeter and matching crossover can avoid
this fundamental error."

He appears to be stating that one cannot properly evaluate the effect of the supertweeter because of the interference of the supertweeter with the audible treble range. In other words, the variable is not isolated so its true effect is undetermined. I would agree with this. However, scientific niceties aside, to my mind, that's the whole point of the supertweeter. It is interacting with the audible range. And many people hear and report this as being an improvement to their system.

Mr. Colloms seems to regard this as unsatisfactory: "Sadly, some critics are so pleased to have heard a difference they are tempted simply to judge it as an improvement." This criticism also appears to have an element of cynicism behind it: "It is not surprising that audio professionals dismiss such published subjective
results, which often seem to be produced in support of media and equipment marketing."

My conclusions, based on the posts to date, are as follows.

Supertweeters affect the audible range through a variety of ways. Mr. Collums, who I would acknowledge as an expert, appears to confirm this.

I would agree that this is an "error" in evaluating the effects of the supertweeter in an objective sense in that the variable is not fully isolated.

I disagree that this "error" means that reports of system improvements through the use of supertweeters are to be dismissed. Whether somebody thinks something is a subjective improvement is ultimately their own personal taste. It does not require scientific affirmation or the approval of anybody else, no matter what that person's level of expertise is. If I like the colour blue, it doesn't really matter what colour you like, or who you are, or what you're an expert in, if anything at all.

The final comment of Mr Collom's, which I've already quoted, is: "It is not surprising that audio professionals dismiss such published subjective results, which often seem to be produced in support of media and equipment marketing".

This appears to place Mr. Colloms in the camp of the objectivists, those who think that if it can't be measured, it doesn't exist. Or the corollary: if it measures the same, it sounds the same. Many people would have difficulty with this.

Like some of the other posters on this thread, I also have a doctorate. My field of expertise is in the social sciences. Unlike the pure scienctists who work with test tubes and heavily controlled experiments, I have a rather healthy regard for the human variable. They cannot be experimented with in test tubes or in controlled conditions with their prior experiences, attitudes and beliefs wiped clean. (And unlike rats, we don't kill them after they've been experimented on because their experimental experience would affect their performance in furture experiments!) Neither is there full knowledge of their psychology or the physiological basis for their psychology. For a "scientist" to cynically dismiss the effects of such possible variables as being merely in support of media or marketing is rather sad. Many pure scientists appear to forget their training when confronted with the human subject in an open system experiment.

At any rate, to get back to the original post that started the thread, I think the regretable answer to the question is this... A supertweeter may be worth the money you pay for it, or it may not be. It depends on whether you like what it does or not. Nobody else can tell you this. You have to try it for yourself. In this sense it no different than any other change to your system. The financially prudent approach would be to try to audition one before purchasing, if possible.
Tbg>> Frankly sir, I don't give a damn what you think<<

And most rational clear thinking folks believe you don't hear what you think you hear.

Had any auditory work lately?
Markphd, your last paragraph is all that I originally meant to say. Had it not been for the demonstration I heard at CES, I would never have bought the Muratas.

As usual my strong insistence that if you hear a benefit it is all that should influence your purchasing decision has gotten me in trouble with those who say you cannot hear a difference if there is no "conventionally accepted theory" to explain why this should be so. This "orthodoxy" is quite unscientific despite the insistence of those advocating it that it is "good" science. I am not a novice in science as I have explained.

I should also note that I decided at the eleventh hour to get my doctorate in political science rather than psychology although I took all my methods training in psychology and had many more seminars in that field. I am well aware of the mind's "jumping to conclusions" and the influence of saliency on the senses.
BTW - I would add that many ordinary tweeters compress quite badly - yes really - even the ones on five figure speakers. FWIW - I would be more concerned with the quality of the transducers producing the all too audible frequencies between 60 Hz and 12 Khz and in particular the audio quality in the midrange than worrying about the extremes of say a supertweeter.