ah, something of a paradox, huh?
good distortion.
we love it, when we hear it. It's all around us, it is inserted into our tunes in small incalculable amounts by the producers and the engineers, and the artists themselves.
I'm no angel, I like to hear the crazy and I've blown speakers to be in the crazy, if you know what I mean.
So, this thread is dedicated to those of us who not only pursue the highest ends of sonic reproduction perfection, but to the rest of us, who won't admit it on a gentlemen's level, (sorry ladies, just a little poetic license) on a public board, that distortion sometimes, is the cat's knees.
Now, I have been infiltrated by distortion from the earliest age, listening to both good and bad examples of it, obviously we can't return to all my former experiences but I'll note a couple of points here, that may make some of this thread worthwhile to some of you.
The day came when I stepped into a friend's truck and there were 4 JBL T-545 speakers, in boxes behind the rear seat, and yes it was bare metal and hard-board seat back, so no attenuation at all. Powered by an Alphasonik A-2125, it was probably pushing near 100 watts per speaker into 2 ohms, so it was being taxed.
driving the source, an Alpine cassette, going through a dinky LOC, (key component here) and into a 3015 computerized eq.
so, I always wondered what made that system so freaking loud. I realize now, that without subs, and using a cheap LOC, there was little output below say, 70 hz.
I think that LOC introduced that "good distortion" in the same way that Klipsch products using autoformers for their crossover level matching, also have that "sound" that may not be exactly high fidelity, but it sure is fun....
there was a synergy in that system, from the cassette limitations, to the voltage step-down, to the 3015's "auto-levelizer" or whatever it was called, (actually has a mic on the unit, and test tone button) to the amp's 2 ohm increased current load, that ended up sounding like the music was almost tactile, like you could put your hand in it and feel something...
anyways, the treatise is that creating good distortion is an art for the 'production' side of the music, but there is a place for the 'reproduction' side as well.
any input, Aphex Exciters or MaxxWaves or whatever, BBE and other artifact producing devices, all welcome.
let's debate the other side for a bit, step out of Klippel plateaus and reading the fine print on speaker parameters. Even the tube kind of distortion belongs, after all, it's running through that output transformer iron that gives it that special flavor.
experiments where people have run LOC to tube amp, or other additive combinations, are what we are looking for, here.
consider this the freak call, if you can't stand the sound of wild horses trampling your speakers then you can visit, but don't stay too long...