At 20:44 30-03-16, Eric Benjamin wrote:

>I have two observations from my own research. The first is that the
>ear signals resulting from equal signals at the loudspeakers is not
>the same as for a real source located between the loudspeakers. The
>second is that, if I measure the ear signals for a real listener for
>the equal loudspeaker signal case, the two ears are different. Why?
>Because the summation of the signals at the ears is so sensitive that
>a condition of balance is never achieved. The loudspeakers don't have
>the same sensitivity, they are not precisely the same distance from
>the ears, and the listener's head itself isn't precisely symmetrical,
>isn't located precisely on the centerline, and isn't pointed precisely
>directly ahead.

What kind of signal were you using when you made these observations, please?

David

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