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"Les Hemmings" wrote:
Eric F. Richards wrote: Bob Miller wrote: On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 20:47:00 -0400, SR wrote: I am interested in learning more about Quadraphonic stereos and it's music. I seem to recall quadraphonic LPs came and went in a year or two in the Seventies. No one could figure out what to put in the rear speakers. It didn't make sense to be sitting in the middle of a band, sound-wise. Mike Oldfield's "Boxed" was produced in quad.. It sounded fine on my stereo but i was itching to try it out on a proper quad system! Did i miss much? Les I don't know. I never had unrestricted access to a quad system. what I did -- and this works only on some systems and may be downright unsafe on others -- was to set up a Hafler Matrix. This is a passive arrangement of the rear speakers to pull out L-R and R-L information for back speakers, just wiring them to an existing stereo. Being a passive system, there isn't a lot of control on what you can do with it, but it will pull out the surround/quad information in the right environment. To wire a Hafler Matrix, you need a system with a common ground for the left and right channels. Since this isn't a graphic interface, I'll draw out the wiring on a couple lines: Left + on stereo ---- Red on Left/Rear speaker Black on Left/Rear speaker ---- Black on Right/Rear speaker Red on Right/Rear speaker ---- Right + on stereo The speakers face each other and should be several feet back from the listener to introduce a little bit of delay. The arrangement takes some fiddling to get right, but works on the cheap. FWIW, the Wikipedia article on Quad elsewhere in this thread claims that the Hafler Matrix works as well as any other quad/surround method for pulling the surround info out. I find that *extremely* hard to believe. But it is a cheap, workable solution. Regards, -- Eric F. Richards "Nature abhors a vacuum tube." -- Myron Glass, often attributed to J. R. Pierce, Bell Labs, c. 1940 |
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