Re: MD: Carver Fire

2001-01-30 Thread las
Don Capps wrote: > Of course, perhaps the "golden ears" listen with their eyes. ;-) > > Don C. Around 1980 some genius had the brilliant idea that music needed some visual concept. The visuals did not have to have anything to do with the song and just watching musicians play the music was not

Re: MD: Carver Fire

2001-01-30 Thread Don Capps
From: "J. Coon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > That is the way it works in conventional physics. That is how a hot air balloon rises, it is part of what makes the wind blow. However, in the field of audiophidialia, things are reversed. Usually based on the latest issue of some magazine. That is why yo

Re: MD: Carver Fire

2001-01-30 Thread J. Coon
That is the way it works in conventional physics. That is how a hot air balloon rises, it is part of what makes the wind blow. However, in the field of audiophidialia, things are reversed. Usually based on the latest issue of some magazine. That is why you can easily tell the difference betwee

RE: MD: Carver Fire

2001-01-30 Thread Alan Dowds
I though air got thinner (less dense) when it gets warm. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 30 January 2001 00:04 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: MD: Carver Fire Why would a stereo sound better with the fireplace

Re: MD: Carver Fire

2001-01-29 Thread las
No. It had nothing to do with the temperature of the room. It had to do with so some that is in the background when a fireplace is on. I read about this system some time ago. Evidently the "improvement" in sound was not shared by audiophiles since we don't hear anything about it today. Larry

MD: Carver Fire

2001-01-29 Thread markaren
Why would a stereo sound better with the fireplace lit? I suspect this has nothing to do with the crackling sound of a fire. ( just fry your speakers and you'll get all the crackle you want) :-) But it has everything to do with the room temperature. This sound improvement is very plausable, as th