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Reviewer's Bio
Greg Weaver, Senior Editor
Greg Weaver entered the audio electronics industry in the late 1960s, originally as a hobbyist, but rapidly moved into retail sales. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, he grew to supervise a variety of audio shops, from small chains to fine audio salons. After receiving a digital electronics degree (with honors) in the early 1980s, he partnered a consumer electronics repair shop, where his role was a varied as designing and installing winning custom competition IASCA 12-Volt systems to repairing computers to designing circuits for coin-operated video arcade games. He has been an industry journalist and product reviewer since the late 1980s, both writing for and editing numerous print and internet journals. He has been an industry consultant since the late 1990s, working with companies such as Harmonic Technology (Greg lead the team that developed the original Magic™ line of products), Quantum, and NSR Sonic Research. Greg currently resides in north central Indiana where he shares his listening room with his Great Dane, Stella. For 15 years, Greg was the senior IT Engineer and Analyst at the University of Notre Dame (supporting the Department of Athletics). In the spring of 2014, he took his early retirement from the University. After spending some time contracting with American General, then working in IT Services for Patrick Industries, the 4th fastest growing company in the nation at that time, he took an IT/IS management position with Valeo, overseeing a 140,000 square foot automotive manufacturing plant. He retired from the IT world in November of 2021. As well as being a Senior Reviewer here at Enjoy the Music.com, he was a Senior Writer for The Absolute Sound for over six years, is a Senior Editor at Positive-Feedback, and the Hyper-Audio Editor at TONEAudio. If you need further information, please feel free to see Greg's personal Bio on his website or just ask for anything else you might need. Thank you.
Greg Weaver's System
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Music Room Some quick calculation reveals the room is about 600 ft2 or some 4300 ft3. Based on room length, it can support full development of frequencies down to about 24Hz, with primary axial resonances at about 44Hz and 78Hz. But the room is amazing sounding, and exhibits remarkably little loading. In fact, during a visit to install and set up my Von Schweikert Audio ULTRA 9 loudspeakers, Leif Swanson, Chief Designer at Von Schweikert Audio said, "You seem to have some pretty cool things taking place with the room. Good length for the bass waves, and those doorways. I notice very little change to the bass walking around the room. You definitely scored with this room."
Click image for larger version.
Because I began programming in 1971 while a sophomore in high school, and just recently (November 2021) retired as IT Engineer/Analyst who is certified on both Microsoft and Apple platforms, I've chosen to build my own Windows based PC as a file server/Streamer. I started with a Lenovo ThinkStation P320 CAD Workstation with an Intel Xeon 3.50GHz quad core CPU running 8 Logical Processors, with 32 GB RAM, and I use a Samsung EVO Plus solid-state drive for the OS. The computer is further optimized for playing music by using Fidelizer 8.8, an installed optimization utility that allows leveraging, managing, and prioritizing a computer's core functionality, services, and processes. My primary streaming and music management software is Roon 1.8, but I also employ J River MediaCenter 28. The stream is transferred from my Media Server to my two DACs by means of a STEALTH USB-Select-T (a tunable USB cable!) to my Lampizat0r Baltic 3, or an Audience frontRow USB cable to my iFi Pro iDSD DAC with outboard iPower Elite Linear Power Supply. Given the way most DACs see DSD files, I have found USB connectivity to be the most effective overall. Files are then served over Buffalo LS220D 12TB Network Attached Storage system using a sonically chosen Cisco router system and all Audience Hidden Treasure Ethernet CAT7 cable, and I have installed the Hidden Treasure SATA cables inside the Workstation. But even that is overkill. I just did it because it was so bloody affordable for me as an IT Geek. The tweeters of my Von Schweikert Audio ULTRA 9's are centered 1' 10" from the sidewalls, and 7' from the wall behind them, with a toe in of about 8 degrees. The prime listening area is centered roughly 12' back from the plane of the tweeters. This placement puts the back of the markedly deep enclosures, and their unique-to-the-industry, room-integrating rear-firing Ambience Retrieval System, 4' 10" away from the front wall. The ULTRA 9s, at just over five hundred pounds each, have a sensitivity of 92dB/W/m, a remarkably stable 4-Ohm nominal impedance, and offer an in-room frequency response of 16Hz to 40kHz. With their internal 1000-Watt mono amplifier and the fully integrated suite of controls for their rear-mounted 15' subwoofer (you can control amplitude, crossover frequency, and fully variable phase, from 0 to 180 degrees), combined with my Audionet Max monoblocks output of 700 Watts into 4 Ohms, gives me some 3400 Watts of power. Not only does this mean that my system will likely never run short of current or clip, but it means that I can measure my system's output in horsepower! Since 745.7 Watts equal 1 horsepower, I have just a tad under 4.6 horsepower! In addition to the native positive attributes of my listening room mentioned above (dimensions and Aperiodic venting), further room taming is achieved with the use of RoomTunes Corner Tunes, two Echo Tunes (one each at the tweeter's primary reflection points on the ceiling), and the surprisingly effective Shakti Innovations Hallographs. Two 6-foot-tall by 4-foot-wide panels of Auralex Studio foam Wedgies provide absorption (and a bit of diffraction as well) at both the first and second side-wall reflection point for the speakers. And while the subtly perceptible contributions made by the Shakti Innovations Hallographs are significantly more apparent in smaller or irregular shaped rooms, in my larger room now (46' by 13'), they don't have the same impact on tonality, but they do still shed better illumination into the rear-most corners of the soundstage. So, if you are buying used, or getting a great deal, they are worth a try. I think that they provide enhancements that you cannot duplicate any other way. Power to components in the listening room is fully dedicated, with a separate 20-Ampere service run from the panel for the amplifiers (main audio and subs), and another separate 15-Ampere service run for the sources and other electronics. All other devices on that level of my home (computers, lights, printers, televisions, heating/AC, etc.) are on separate, isolated circuits. At the time the new services were run, I also had the whole home grounding system redone, including the installation of new grounding rods, in order to both comply with the current National Electrical Code standards of achieving A resistance of 25 Ohms or less, and so as to not introduce any unnecessary noise into the power delivery system, in an attempt to provide the highest degree of sonic accuracy possible, ensuring the blackest of backgrounds, improving the pace, rhythm and timing, and painting a wider, deeper, and taller soundstage, including better separation of vocals and instruments. Those who know me (or have read my work over the years) know that my system MUST be tonally accurate, strikingly neutral, stunningly transparent, and jubilantly musical. However, open, detailed, and layered soundstaging, combined with realistically sized and spatially accurate images, are every bit as important to me as truthful timbre and musical bloom. With the right recording, this system whisks you back to the venue or hall of the original performance for a spooky-real recreation of that event in the here and now. I have had any number of audiophile and musician visitors' remark on the power of the listening experience as witnessed from my chair. Musicians from any number of genres of music, from Salsa to Rock 'n' Roll to Classical, have actually wept after or during a listening session, and audiophiles of many years have remarked things like, "What more could you ask for," and "I've never heard a rig sound any better than this." While those are encouraging words, and seem to indicate that I'm doing the right things with component and cable selection as well as room set up, my system (every system" ;-D) must be seen as an ongoing work-in-progress. Every once in a while, the addition of some new piece, be it a source, a cable, or an accessory, allows me to move just a little closer to that actual musical event. The journey continues....
Multi-Channel Music and Home Theatre System
Monitor
Loudspeakers
Electronics
Sources
Cables
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