beolab on bluetooth - Digital Scientific UK
Transcription
beolab on bluetooth - Digital Scientific UK
BEOLAB ON BLUETOOTH Bang & Olufson BeoLab 6000s despite being twelve years old remain an iconic and desirable speaker system. Combining a preowned pair of 6000’s with a BluTooth DAC yields an affordable, flexible, high quality music system but read the section on equalisation to get the best performance. Bang & Olufson Style Bluetooth Budget By Michael Ellis Tuesday, 6 May 2014 Lust and the Ravages of Time I’ve lusted after a pair of BeoLab 6000s ever since they were introduced in to the B&O line up in 1992. Of all the speakers in the range the 6000 is the epitome of minimalist styling. The pencil thin columns perhaps challenged the box shaped speaker ethos more than any speaker design in history. Factoring in the cost of a suitably matching BeoCenter sound source just placed this highly desirable kit out of my budgetary grasp. Twelve years on much has changed, but the timeless minimalist styling of the 6000 appeals to me as much now 1 v2 as it ever has done. The 6000s and their bigger brother 8000s are still highly sought after and a lively trade in these speakers can be seen to take place on eBay. But the world moves on and the technological revolutions of CDs and cassettes, found in the BeoCenters of the 90’s have succumbed to the ravages of time and have long been usurped by digital streams as our favoured music sources. This review describes my experience in combining a pre-owned pair of BeoLab 6000s with an inexpensive Bluetooth DAC to stream music from my Mac Book Pro and iPhone. Steeaming from a Windows or Linux or any Bluetooth source should be possible. The Speakers I purchased a pair of 6000s on eBay for £320. After doing some reading I learned that it was worth checking them over before parting with my cash so I took along my iPhone and a cable that splits the signal from the headphone socket into two RCA phono sockets. Setting the speaker input selector to line input on each speaker I was able to test them with music played from my iPhone. Placing my ear close to each of the drive units I was able to verify that all the drive units (two bass/mid range and a tweeter) in each speaker were functioning. In addition I carefully removed the front frets (they slide vertically upwards about half an inch and then can be gently eased off) The main thing to look for is that the thin rubber roll surrounds on the edge of the main drive units show no tears or signs of perishing. Having satisfied myself they were in good order I loaded them into my car and drove home. listened through the FatMan/SX60 system, whereas through the BluDAC/6000’s it loses some of that definition and becomes flabby. I’ve read reports of people adding a subwoofer to the 6000s and some of Fortunately there is a workaround those reports say it makes matters available by using Airfoil; worse which is pretty much what I commercially available software for would expect. My experience is $25 that lets you nominate any subwoofers produce a loud but often application to have its audio stream mushy, poorly defined bass which hijacked and re-routed to the audio whilst adequate for boosting movie device of your choice. sound effects in a small speaker surround sound AV cinema system How Does it Sound? Note this is a subjective non technical are entirely inappropriate in a decent stereo hi-fi system. review! It should also be taken in context of the overall budget here of Equalisation £380. For that price we’re in the Having balanced the books in terms cheaper end of the of the upmarket of cost, is there anything that can be sound docks from the likes of Bose, done to bring a better sense of Bowers & Wilkins, Libratone and balance to the sound? I’ve found use Cambridge Audio. I recently of a graphic equaliser can go a long auditioned a number of those Bluetooth way to improving the subjective expensive sound docks as a DAC listening experience. There was a Christmas present for my son and There are many DACs available and was disappointed by all of them. For time back in the days of analogue when crucifix’s were waived at such at a range of prices. Since I wanted the record, for a similar budget my to stream my audio wirelessly from son plumped for a FatMan Mi with a devices and curses uttered about the my MacBookPro and given my sinfulness of introducing all this extra pair of Cambridge Audio SX60 budget I decide to opt for the Crystal speakers. The difference in sound corrupting distorting technology into Acoustics Bluetooth BluDAC. It the signal path. Now however, the between the FatMan/SX60 system and any of the docks was as marked equalisation is taking place in the as having the band playing next door digital domain, and whilst it is indubitably true that you cannot put and having invited them into your back what is not there, the living room (Shame FatMan appear arguments for distortion are not quite not to be trading any more!). the same. Sure the sound is in some In this context the 6000s / BluDAC sense more synthetic and even combination is an out and out winner. arguably further from the original employs APTX for the transmission of The impeachable timeless aesthetics sampled signal, but subjectively, at high quality digital audio stream over of the best of B&O, the convenience least to my ears, the benefits of a little equalisation are manifest. Bluetooth and uses the well regarded of the infinite record collection courtesy Spotify or iTunes, and a Woolfson DAC for converting that If you are using iTunes you can use sound quality that out of the box is digital data into a line level analogue the equaliser that is an integral part of leagues better than any sound dock signal suitable for the 6000’s line in. the iTunes software. My that I have heard. That said, the The BluDAC was purchased for a sound did not compare so favourably recommendation is you start with the penny short of £60. with my son’s Christmas present. The iTunes equaliser “Loudness” setting and adjust from there. main flaws I found with the sound Setting Up was that mid range seemed Setting up could not be easier. congested, harsh and too forward (I Simply plug everything in, pair the have seen the 6000s reviewed Mac Book Pro with the BluDAC and elsewhere as “shouty”), whilst the select the Bluetooth for the output bass being loud enough was audio device on the Mac. One draw uncontrolled and loose. The double back from this approach though is bass on Brubeck’s Take Five has a that all sound produced on the Mac iTunes equalisation settings is routed through to the speakers. So real smack and dryness to it when 2 not only sources such as iTunes and Spotify, but also sounds produced for alerts and alarms are also routed which when listening at high volumes can be very disconcerting. The main improvement is made by subduing that aggressive and congested upper midrange; 1K to 4K. This makes vocals that were previously too harsh and shouty take a more neutral and balanced profile. I then found reigning back the bass finished things off to produce a very a pleasing sound, though no amounts of twiddling with the lower frequency will restore that missing definition and tight control. Spotify does not have a built in equaliser. Quite how Spotify can tout a premium service with high bit rate streaming audio and not provide any equalisation leaves me dumfounded, particularly when there are nearly 2000 requests on their forum for such a feature. Fortunately there are ways around this; either at no cost, using system wide equalisation by piping the system sound through Soundflower into Apple’s AULab software or you can fork out $25 for the aforementioned AirFoil software which also includes a simple graphic equaliser. Piping digital audio streams in this way does not degrade the signal one jot as it did in the old analogue days. Fixing Up Spotify with AirFoil As mentioned, Spotify wonderful service that it is, suffers from a few limitations when running on a Mac. Most notably the sound from Spotify just gets sent to wherever your system sounds goes. So even if you do redirect your system sound to your Bluetooth device all the other sound effects, alerts and sounds from other applications get sent along the same channel. The other main shortcoming is that Spotify doesn’t have its own equalisation. By far the easiest way to address these two issues is to buy AirFoil from Rogue Amoeba. Spotify and route it through to your selected Bluetooth device. Bring up Spotify’s Effects window to reveal the equaliser settings. Equalisation Settings The Adaptive Bass Linearisation (ABL) incorporated in BeoLab loudspeakers is a form of equalisation that is used to compensate for the small bass drive units. Using equalisation here is arguably just an extension of that procedure so one might be tempted to think that there should be a single setting that ought to apply for all your listening needs. In practice, I have found I benefit from having two different settings, one for stereo music and the other when I am using the speakers for watching a movie on my projector. I find that for movie watching boosting the midrange section (almost the opposite what we did for the music) results in dialog being much easier to pickup and follow. Once AirFoil is installed, goto the AirFoil preferences and select your Bluetooth audio device under the “Play Local Audio Through” section. EQ Settings for Music EQ Settings for Movies 3 Select Spotify in the main AirFoil window from the list of applications. This will hijack the audio from FASHIONMONTHLY 5 May 2014 Applying System Wide Equalisation (Apple Mac - Free Software) switching between adjusted and unadjusted output to see if the changes sound better. If you do not want to purchase AirFoil, it is possible to use free software to add system wide equalisation . Start by downloading and installing Soundflower. Soundflower is a free audio system extension that allows applications to pass audio to other applications. Download Apple’s free AULab Go to the Sound system preference panel and select “Soundflower (2ch)” as the device to output sound to. You can save the AULab settings as a document. Opening this document will apply all the settings in one easy step. System Sound Preference Start AU Lab and use the factory configuration to create a new document when the Audio Input Device is Soundflower (2ch) and the Audio Output device is the Bluetooth device (yours may have a different name) AULab is a very sophisticated digital sound processing program and offers many more audio processors than just graphic EQ. Another use I have found is to use the delay processor to add a small delay to the signal to solve lip sync issues when using my video projector. Useful Links AirFoil from Rogue Amoeba https:// www.rogueamoeba.com/airfoil/. AULab software from Apple https:// www.apple.com/uk/itunes/mastered-for-itunes/ Soundflower from http:// soundflower.en.softonic.com. Crystal Acoustics BluDAC http:// www.crystalaudiovideo.com/ProductDetails/BluDAC-UK.aspx AULab Document Click on the popup menu directly under the “Effects” label on the “Output 1” column and select “AUGraphicsEQ” This will create a 31 channel graphic equaliser. Select “10 Bands” from the popup menu and adjust the levels to taste. The pictures above show the settings I have used and you can replicated these as a starting point. You can easily switch on and off the effects of equalisation by clicking on the little “B” icon to the left of the “AUGraphicsEQ” popup menu item in the “Output 1” channel. This is useful for quickly 4