Andrew said that he doesn't think it makes sense to buy speakers that need to be improved later, but it makes more sense to buy speakers that you like right from the start. And what does it matter what's inside the speakers if you like how they sound? Then everything will be fine. If you like speakers in which the manufacturer has used cheap parts, that's your problem. 
Some people don't know when to stop either. Some people are never satisfied and never sit down and just enjoy the music. I see people "upgrading" all the time and never going to be happy. Most people are just splitting hairs when it comes to what's coming out of their system and feel they need to "UPGREADE". If that's what you like more power to you. I'll just sit back and enjoy life and music...
I had one guy tell me his $14 earbuds sound better than most $4000 speaker systems. And I had another idiot tell me that the specs on his computer's CD player says "0 to 50,000 Hz", therefore all music he listens to through his computer is 0 to 50KHz. And there was no convincing him otherwise. So you are right.... there really are people who should never, ever, ever see the inside of anything. And the really mind blowing part is, both were arguing with me on the discussion page of the wikipedia entry for "audiophile".
But as Danny always says, all the manufacturer build to a pricepoint. And more people like shiny stuff than a black box with great parts inside you cannot see. So they spend money on design and build of a nice shiny box. Parts don't bring customers, high gloss videos about nice speakers do ;-)
If the parts are spectacular and of immaculate standards and it is not voiced correctly it doesn’t matter. Andrew’s whole point is how does it sound stop taking everything apart and just listen to the music and enjoy. If it doesn’t sound good return it and try something new. Stop trying to fix something not designed correctly in the first place.
A well designed crossover makes ALL the difference. I spent months learning from people and learned how to do quasi anechoic measurements of my speakers. Then I redesigned the crossovers. After a few iterations I made a crossover that is phase coherent and quite linear. Whereas before it had a dip around 2.3khz and wasn’t phase coherent at the crossover. I used premium parts to make the crossovers and it was kinda like getting new speakers. Yeah it made them sound much better. I did swap out crossover parts in real time and think I can hear a difference. ( the crossover is external so I was able to swap different parts with the same values ). I did hear some differences between air core inductors vs iron core. Don’t know so much about the caps though. So although I dig Andrew, yes it does matter how the crossover is designed and implemented And besides as you mentioned. It was super fun and educational. Even at 55 I love learning this stuff. It’s most of the fun actually for me.
Crossovers and associated compensation circuits do make a large difference however soft dome mid-range and tweeters will always sound different than cone mid-range and compression tweeters.
Great response/review. I love where you ultimately went with the invite for Andrew. I can personally confirm the validity of a speaker upgrade I have used. I found some Polk S20s on absolute blowout clearance. They are just on my desk in an untreated office. I thought they were dull and loose with the sound where I had to push them to show any kind of performance. I figured I like doing soldering and stuff like that so I ordered an upgrade kit and some no-rez. BOOM! At real low volumes, the sound stage was immediately full of detail as the speakers just disappeared. They voice extremely well and go way beyond any review of a stock S20. I'm sold on the work you do. I love Andrew's videos as well & would really like to see you guys get together and break bread. It would make for a fun video and probably be good for both of your channels. THANKS DANNY!
Have been listening to stereo components for over 60 years and gr research seems to be one of the most thoughtful commentators I have ever listened to online. I knew someone back in Boulder Colorado in 40 years ago whose whole business is just a little home business was to replace the crossovers with more high quality parts to improve reasonably good stereo speakers. So this guy makes sense... And his presentations are always balanced and thoughtful.
Recently I completed the Dennis Murphy Mod for my Pioneer SP-BS22 bookshelf speakers. I can say there absolutely was a great improvement in sound. The sound stage is now more expansive and deep with a smoother high end. I learned from practical hard proof: Crossovers matter. The original speakers were quite nice for the price but the upgrade took them to a new level.
Fun! Enjoy them, I did. It's too bad the BS22 is not made anymore. "People making budget speakers put in 10 cent parts. I spend $1 and that makes a big difference." --A.J. 😊
Audio is like the automotive industry. 99% of the folks out there buy a stereo system and they are done. Then there is that 1% that likes tweak what they have. They might use heavy gauge OFC wires. They might replace their op-amps with a higher grade chips. And some might tweak the crossover. Hot rodders have been tweaking cars for years.
That's exactly who Danny is. Racing the quarter mile is another of his passions. I can't see the video right now. But I think he's wearing a drag racing t-shirt.
Excellent analogy. I've never left a car stock for more than a month, and once I got into diy and customized speakers, I'll never go back. It's crazy how much manufacturers leave on the table. Upgrading the crossover parts is like going from stock garbage shocks to some adjustable Koni shocks.
@@JC-lk3oy Maybe with exceptions as it is a T50 from Gordon Murray! But not all cars and equipment are at that level, possibly none, so I understand what you mean.
A couple of years a ago, I took my Jamo 7.2 speakers in to have my bass woofers repaired. My speakers were 20 years old at the time. The repair shop gave me the option to rebuild my crossovers. There was no need to redesign, just upgrade very old and very cheap components. WOW! What a difference. I spent close to $1000, but the difference was nothing short of amazing. I think Danny is providing a much needed service. It is a shame that speaker manufacturers go cheap on the crossover components, but they do. I am sure some of the improvement was because the components were old, but I know they never sounded this good even when new. By the way, the tweeters and midrange drivers were still in great shape and nothing was done to them.
Same as the guys I know that get car systems, they buy the same speakers ect. but one guy always changes crossover ect and doesn't use the all in one block that you can buy, he does it with little resistors ect and his stereo systems sound 3xs as good.
I don't see how anyone in their right mind could hold a grudge against GR Research. Danny's videos help everyone enjoy their speakers. He demonstrates where very inexpensive speakers and components can be quite good, and improved, and, yes, sometimes points out where an expensive speaker can easily be improved or fixed by using a $10.00 resistor instead of a $0.50 resistor. And, Danny almost always uses measurements to back up his opinions. I think watching Danny's videos can improve peoples enjoyment of very cheap speakers or their expensive speakers. This is a gift. Knowing the difference between good quality and bad quality is beneficial for any material thing we buy.
All I know is, I have speakers the manufacturers highly regarded ,once I tested the speakers , was quite disappointed and wanted to return them. I found out you had an upgrade kit for those speakers I bought and installed the upgrade kit , am I glad I did ,I can almost melt into the same music after the upgrade that I was disappointed before. I trust your work because the results is definite, stay unwavering some of us that know better got your back through your proven work, those that do not know ignorance is bliss
EXACTLY... We are dealing with AUDIO, and make quality decisions on what we see (cosmetics)... Imagine, going to buy a fine painting for your living room, and instead of looking at it, you make your decisions based on licking it....Would you do that???
@@grahamstrahle4010 and others listen with computers, if everything in this world was perfect, which is an impossibility, the world would be a boring place. Danny is also talking to folks with disposable income. The kind that can have it to spend 10k for what's considered a mid level amplifier or those where money doesn't matter at all and perfection does. Man I just ain't got that kinda of money, further, one person's trash is another person's treasure, just ask anyone who's ever been divorced and remarried another divorcee and had been happily married for 20 years. Trust your ears, if it sounds good to you than it sounds good, if it sounds great then it sounds great, to you. It might not to me even after putting Danny's expensive crossovers in speakers that already cost way to much money. Power to y'all, I'm glad if you got that kinda of disposable income, I for one do not and it's my hard earned money, I'm gonna buy what sounds great to my ears, if they don't after I get them home and have broken them in they go back to where that came from and the search continues. I'm not going to void the warranty only to find out after broken in they don't sound good "to my ears"!!
When these things devolve into personal criticism they completely lose me. I get both points of view. For me, if the quality of the sound is (subjectively to me) is commensurate with the price, then we’re good. DIY upgrades are a perfectly legitimate way to enjoy the hobby. OTOH, Expecting speakers to sound good with out upgrades is reasonable. The $/sound ratio is what matters. As someone whose solder joints look like used bubble gum, I need a decent sound from the factory. You both have perfectly valid opinions. So let’s get back to the music.
I used to watch Robinson’s channel. Just his attitude toward the “I don’t care what’s inside of a speaker.” It honestly made me very disappointed and upset to hear him say. As I said on his page “I care what’s inside my speakers.” I enjoy replacing caps let alone researching what individual caps sounds like even within the same brand! Please Keep up the excellent dedication to our speakers Danny!
Not really. Andrew & Kristi didn't say GR Research or even make that suggestion as there are many DIY folks. Therefore this public direct call out by Danny man is a bit much. An email or phone call to Andrew & Kristi would've been MUCH more appropriate and professional. A direct call out isn't a good way to win someone over or send an invite for a visit. What I see is Danny using a call out to gain attention of Andrew & Kristi's audience to boost sales. Really Danny? Really??? Not only am I embarrassed, I'm embarrassed for you.
@@lithiumstatic I see Danny putting the truth out on how parts matter, and when Andrew said 'who cares what's on the inside', I thought that was quite ill informed, to put it mildly. We shall see what Andrew is made of by how he responds.
Hello folks. I feel Andrew has a bit of narcissist behavior. This is the second time or same type of reply as the first time. Calling out all reviewers. Now those who did visit Danny's they walk out going home. With brand new perspective. Ride Easy
@@BootJamesOut Funny you would call Andrew a narcissist when he never pointed out anyone in specific. Who's publicly calling out who??? Danny. I won't drop him a label, but you can figure it out if you're able to be unbiased. Last don't mistake confidence for narcissism which you're clearly doing.
@@pounceonyou1958 He responded live with humility and apologetically. Something Danny would never do even though he's the one making public finger pointing call outs. Looks much more like he's using it to draw customers from Andrews channel. Really sad to see that kind of behavior. Also really sad to see biased folks patting Danny on the back for being on online bully.
Very gracious Danny, parts matter, and I absolutely care what's on the inside, and the info you have given us over the years is very much appreciated, thank you.
I follow and enjoy both the AR and GR channels. When I saw the original AR video, I anticipated this response from GR. Personally, I took AR's "don't care" comments in a different context. He's using the "black box" reviewing technique, in that whatever he can't hear or see from the outside is irrelevant. He's "blind testing" things such as the crossover components, dampening material, bracing and binding post material, which aren't visible to him. He can't control the decisions made by the designer and therefore "doesn't care" how the designer got to the end result, only how it fares against the direct competition with its outward characteristics (i.e. sound, aesthetics, construction). Ultimately, he's judging it by the same characteristics as the typical end consumer. I'm sure he appreciates (and can likely hear) the benefits of better crossover components, non-magnetic binding posts, etc. but he also realizes the cost concessions required at certain price points and trade-offs to be made. Perhaps, instead of saying "doesn't care", a more accurate statement would be "I don't want to know". He's relying on his senses for the review and doesn't want to influenced by the brand name on some crossover component.
Humble honest and great points. I have been around “high end” hifi with my dad since the 70s. I’ve worked with some people who are very well known in the industry. This is not bs. I built a power supply and swapped caps for a year before I landed on the right filter caps. When it comes together it is amazing.
I'm a fan of Andrew Robinson and watched that particular video, and I have to say he's wrong. I'm an electronic engineer by trade and someone who loves audio. It really matters to me the quality of the crossover and the impact it can have. Speakers that have high-quality crossover parts are unfortunately overpriced, so upgrades can be an affordable route without the financial impact.
@@zizendorfBetter sound. Better clarity. Vocals are easier to understand. Details which get masked by cheap parts become more prevalent. My first crossover upgrade was shocking with how much information was being muted by the cheap parts.
@@ChadHuisinga That’s certainly another option. Everyone who sends their speakers to Danny are either curious or have speakers they aren’t happy with. I doubt many are buying new speakers with the intention of upgrading them. I’m sure some have. I almost did it to a pair of Sony SSCS5s. I started upgrading crossover parts over a decade ago. I did one out of a pair of speakers so I could compare stock to upgraded. It was no contest. The stock speaker was noticeably duller and muted details. Cost of the upgrade was less than $200. This was on a $400 pair of Polk speakers. I did it to multiple brands of used speakers. Every time the stock crossovers did the same thing. Brand name speakers are always sold at a price point. The cost of the parts to a speaker is roughly 20%. Since most people aren’t even aware of crossover circuitry they are blissfully unaware of what they are missing. But if you like your speakers as they are then good for you! You don’t need GR Research.
@@zizendorfThat's not what he was talking about. He was comparing an "over-priced" speaker with a high quality crossover with a more budget friendly speaker that is upgraded with higher quality components.
You ROCK Danny!! I've learned far more from you than any other audio RUclipsr. Anyone can plug in a speaker, listen and comment. You actually understand speaker design and have done more for the audio community than any of those other jokers. Building my own speakers was a really fun and rewarding project. Thank You!
You're always criticised by those who do less never more. These companies pay very little into research & design & expect consumers to just such up the end product.
Brilliantly measured and eloquent response to that thinly veiled attack from Robinson. Keep up the good work Danny, informing those of us that like to get informed as well as being open to discussion and never dogmatic. Oh and you're always a gentleman.
This may get some people riled up. While I think Andrew could have been less condescending with his feelings towards the speaker modding/upgrading community, i very much understand his point. He doesn't review DIY/modded equipment. His reviews have to be based on what he receives from a manufacturer or retail store. It truly doesn't matter what parts are in the product. If it's good, he explains why. If it's not, he explains why. If it's really bad, he doesn't post a review. His channel has never been about telling viewers to buy something, take it to someone else to fix problems with it, then take it home and enjoy it. I guarantee that, as long as he's been in the HIFI world, he understands what crossover parts do to a signal. It's just that, for the purpose of what he and Kristie do with their channel, they don't matter. If you don't like the way a speaker sounds from the factory, don't buy it. Definitely don't buy expecting Danny to be able to work miracles and make it sound like something that would cost you $3-4K more than what you paid. Just buy one of Danny's kits and get the good stuff the first time. Much as I don't come to Danny's channel for info on how well a particular pair of Paradigm towers might blend in with the decor of my living room, i don't go to Andrew's channel for detailed technical analysis of how they perform. I watch Andrew and Kristie to get info about it would be to live with a particular product as it comes from the manufacturer.
I like your video's and find them informative and entertaining. No product is perfect and there is always room for improvement. I bought a fairly expensive pair of speakers ($2000) and discovered later that the bracing in the cabinet was not really that good. I didn't notice the issue until later when I played them at a really loud volume level. The next model of that speaker addressed that issue. Not everyone can afford to buy a new pair of speakers every couple of years. I worked a short time in the Audio Industry, and later I calibrated measuring instruments. I recognize that you are providing a valuable service to your customers and viewers.
@@ChadHuisinga It's pretty obvious that someone trying to sell you the product isn't going to highlight any flaws in it. They're literally incentivized to portray the product in a positive light regardless.
I'am a hobbyist that was buying from Zalytron on long Island back in the day. I had "the books" and some software but learned that it was much better to send the drivers out to madisound, have them analyzed, and have the crossovers designed by people that really knew how to use LEAP. That being stated, It's obvious i got my feet pretty wet and the few people that are getting into this now, should really carefully watch, listen, and understand your vids. They are 100% accurate. If I was to do another build (which im not), I would send the drivers to GR, or Madisound! But it gets to the point where one would be better off simply buying a proven speaker other than wasting countless hours trying to re-invent the wheel! Edit: as far as your upgrades, it's a great idea and small investment for people that want to keep and upgrade their "vintage" speakers, or even "fix" the newer ones that they may own! Thank you for such great vids!!!
I specifically remember this in regards to the open baffle decware zen master speaker. Basically saying Danny wouldn't be able to improve it because there was no crossover. I personally really enjoy that speaker, but it is a huge compromise when you go with a large wide band driver like that. The work Danny does is admirable, nad it absolutely makes a marked improvement to upgrade the crossover parts the way he does. The snark from Andrew on this is very off-putting.
My GR-Research crossover upgrades were my first introduction to how speakers should really sound and led me down the right path in my audio journey which has brought me many hours of enjoyment. In my opinion after experiencing the upgrade experience myself, anyone who thinks negatively about it doesn't know what they are talking about or are biased for some financial or other self interest.
Excellent explanation of how parts effect sound. I built a pair of your Brutes with the high end options. I could not find a speaker anywhere that performs as well for the price. I have built several pairs of speakers including Open Baffles, which are my favorite. Parts do matter! Facts are often difficult for people today, Danny you need to put more feeling into your reviews so the wannabe's can understand what your offering. Andrew is clearly a very sensitive man, he needs a hug.
If people took this view in politics I think we’d all get along a lot better. Thanks for this non aggressive chat on improving life. It comes from a passionate place obviously.
The alleged shill reviewers sound like timeshare salesmen Danny went through his bona fides recently and yet he has to address the alleged shill reviewers One reason I build my own speakers is that the mark-up is insane and you generally get crap parts Ignore the shill reviewers
The upgrade tech talks are the best bit. I've learned so much about speaker design from this channel. The keep it simple design philosophy in GR-Research really works. I understand the acoustic physics, but the hands on design / measure / iteration approach is the best.
The guts ARE important. The high end audio industry is NOTORIOUS for not only snake oil but "reviews" that often feel like paid ads. Manufacturers have privately admitted that when they set HIGHER prices, their products are perceived as better by the high end industry in general. The budget of a product allocated to cosmetics alone can be a significant chunk of the selling price.
@@carlosoliveira-rc2xt Well you can call bullshit all you want. I didn't come here for an argument. However, I did research for a year and then searched for an Audi A6 Avant. Found one, based upon 0-60. Bought it and didn't give two shits that it was silver. But, you're right, it does have a leather interior. They all do. I'd have purchased it regardless of it's color. LOL
What a splendid video. I have watched your channel for some years now. In my opinion always interesting, honest, cautious and full of fine expertise. I love your work and I learned a lot. Thank you so much. Your answer to Andrew is very kind and understanding. Your authenticity is striking. But still I doubt whether Andrew will understand. He seems so opniated about things he clearly does not understand and is not willing to understand. A pity really. Compliments to you Gerry! You are the best. Many, many thanks for all your wisdom and kindness!
Love the video, and Andrew can do better keeping his emotions out of certain videos. But talking about Andrew needs to understand speaker placement is ignorant. He has detailed how he uses lasers, moves speakers around testing toe in, width, distance from the back wall, side wall etc. Also, he worked as an editor in the hifi magazine industry. It really takes away from an otherwise inspiring way of approaching a discussion, assuming instead of understanding the background and the claims made by the person you are responding to. I hope this results in more collabs and genuine curiosity over assumptions and division. This would greatly benefit everyone, especially us viewers 😁
If he does not care about what is in a speaker, he really should not be in the speaker review domain. Credibility is built on deep understanding and a wide base of knowledge. Anything else may be arrogance in its true meaning
Not that I disagree, but you don't really believe that the majority of speaker reviewers, in the history of speaker reviewers, were well versed in speaker design or even a novice at design for that matter. That being said, I wouldn't be quick to dismiss any reviewers' experience at what they do. There's always going to be two kinds of audiophiles; those who only care about how a speaker sounds and those who only care how it measures. Both are valid. And both can be completely unrepresentative of how a speaker will sound in your environment and application. But it's always going to be impractical for me to believe that I should not trust my ears when it comes to speakers, when they can be measured, but I should trust my ears when comes to audiophile esoterica, i.e. that which is not substantiated by measurements.
Wow. Real high standards there fella. I guess you only watch 4 review channels. But honestly, it’s not a big deal. It’s just Hifi. No wrongs or rights. Andrew is right because the vast majority of folks just buy a speaker, push it up against a wall and don’t care much about its crossover. A minority of specialized audiophiles will tear into a speaker and upgrade internals. And that’s ok too. But it’s a small number of folks.
The ears are important but it does not change the fact that when the parts are different , you should hear the difference. If you don’t, go and have a hearing test.
He's got a point .Don't like your speakers get a new pair - There's zillions out on the market Now if you like your speakers, and you can take them to another level then upgrades makes sense .Makes even more $ sense on older top model hi end speakers and are still great or used speakers that were purchased at a heavily discounted price leaving the buyer extra 🍞for potential upgrades - ultimately you do have to first like the speakers you own
Dear Danny, I have so much respect for what you do, your dedication to improve the hifi industry, your depth of knowledge and experience that you openly share, and the time and effort you put into doing so. Since subscribing to your channel a few years ago I have learnt so much, for which I'm eternally grateful. I have yet to read any of the 904 comments already left before I started composing this one, but have no doubt they'll be along the same vein as this. Also I think you handled this with sheer character, absolute class, and dignity. Music feeds my soul. Thank you
what few seem to realize is the absolute best parts come in almost no speakers regardless of price. many 'philes have a tough time wrapping their head around that concept.
@@carlosoliveira-rc2xt too funny. Its actually quite true. Take a look at Wilson, Rockport, Magico. They use good parts but far from great parts. Open a few up and have a look.
Danny this is a great video! I love all of your stuff and all of your passion. I also love the fact that you repeatedly mentioned the fun of it. That's why I continue to do this as an avocation. I started doing speaker design professionally starting 50 (12 years old) years ago and got an electrical engineering degree and actually briefly worked for JBL for a time in the late 70s. I went into IT engineering because I can make more money lol. IT in the past 35 years has been as good a 'wild' and exciting geek ride as there has ever been - even more that audio stuff. But as you say for speakers and audio - just the fun of it and of course there's also once you're done with it you get to sit down and re listen to all your favorite reference material to see what you've achieved and what you've lost. And testing is very important too but it's only half the story. (that also why I am a foodie that worked in restaurants for 10 years) Testing is obviously very important in the design phase and a very valuable tool for that. If i had the software and compute power now back in the 70s Yikes - i may have decided to be a speaker designer! Andrew Robinsons video - (I do feel obligated to say in ARs defense that he never mentioned Danny GR at all) If you're not interested in what's inside then you're not interested in what's inside fair enough sir! If so then just buy a better speaker, still considering dannys point that more cost does not necessarily get better parts/design, but it doesn't mean you need to poo poo people producing / consuming peeps that just_love _to play with this stuff and of course listen . AND Danny - when you say this or that makes a HUGE difference (where you sell and profit from this - kind of a conflict of interest at least a little?!? ;)) that is also just spending much more money on the original speaker investment - based on solely your opinion. You both fully know that statement is true!!! (side note - stuff like cheap binding post that may break much more easily , and wire used in the xover - please dont give that praise as to MASSIVE differences in speaker sound - they almost never effect the end sound unless they are just defective) I really loose any / all patience to listen on voodoo analysis, both test and listening, and I have heard so many listening tests where the improvement effects of these 'things' , gold plated power cables, etc, etc,etc - gets completely busted .... as the people making the claims in these controlled AB tests - cannot tell the difference, they just use it as marketing to line thier coffers. OK no more soap box) . As to you Danny on some of your claims - you do sometimes make claims that these more expensive caps , etc or binding posts (for example) sound more spacious or open - you must admit - that is purely a qualitative statement of opinion based solely on your listening tests (and others may agree with you but others dont) so keep that in mind - as a VERY large percentage of high and higher end than that - audio sound - is primarily subjective and or just marketing buzz. So I am saying we can all hear good to great sound reliably - beyond that it is pure opinion. I know this from 50+ years of doing this as a student, engineer, and listening to recorded / reproduced music on systems of every possible quality. Now having said that - anything with a passive xover is a compromise........ :) most quote "audiophiles" (i used to be but not really anymore - I just love great sound,, not talkin about it like it was really fine wine or cheese! :)) amazingly have no clue though that building speakers with a really high qaulity passive crossover is a VERY hard and VERY expensive experience. The xover can easily be the most expensive part of a high end 3way floor standing (like yamaha ns5000) It can be very expensive and even the best passive crossover is a big compromise to me for sound especially for power and dynamics . The best way to listen to music is active speakers where the amps the crossovers and the drivers and cabinets are all a single equation for the designer. In fully integrated active speakers you're not filtering gobs of much higher power low Z signals like you are in a passive crossover, you're not dealing directly with the inductive impedances (needing zoble nets of more Ls and Cs to equalize the impdance of the woofers huge inductance) of big woofers. Each driver in an active setup sees the direct attachment to the amps output stage transistors w/o the Cs and Ls in passive between. In an active environment you do ALL the xover implement at low levels tween the pre and power amps using compnents that are are MUCH cheaper to get the best quality. you're essentially filtering voltages not gobs of power (as in passive) or rather minuscule amounts of power. And when you split the amps up into three separate amps and each ones optimized and handles the power for just that section it opens the thing up drastically and amazingly. Also active speakers can be cheaper if you go look now at all the active monitors for recording I know a lot of people think those are too neutral and flat for audio file tastes but I always thought well what they're saying is I don't like the fact they're uncolored. To me speakers with passive crossovers in them are a definite compromise, they're like the minor leagues in baseball when you're ready to go to the show - the major leagues - you go to active. For obvious reasons sound reinforcements uses pure active multi amping systems for 40 years, those aren't designed for ultra high fidelity they're designed for clarity and power, very high efficiency and running full blast for long periods of time. but if you use audiophile design principles for active (i currently use ATC 25mkII with each having its on focal sub6 for left right which is essentially equal to an ATC SCM100 active floor speaker) you can get ear popping clarity and dynamics - amazing results from active speakers. Again i think cost wise if you consider the amp and the cost of a good speaker and a great passive xover - a good active system can actually be cheaper you just can't switch out the amps which means for high end audio it's a no go for marketing. You see how that works amigo??? Danny - technically - You know yer stuff - you are 50% techincal / objective, and 50% subjective / pure opinion. That makes you twice as objective in my mind as almost all the other review mix of useful and noise that exists in this new era of youtube 'audiophiles'. I really wish that word not be more negative connotation / derogatory these days, rather than a label of objective understanding as it was in the past..... I know, I know old school (and at least as much new school) guy crapping about new gens.... lol :) Anyway enough of my rambling keep up the good work my friend!
I stopped watching his channel a long time ago. If I had not, going out of his way to demonstrate ignorance about speaker design would have done the trick. 🤪
Me too. I stopped following that channel also because I didn't like the 'smug' attitude that I detected on their channel. GR Research emphasise that a lot of speakers are obviously made to a price point, but if the speaker is well designed then GR Research are able to make your original purchase sound significantly better for a modest outlay and bit of DIY input - and who doesn't like a bit of DIY input!
I don't bother watching any reviewer who does not at least look inside the box. If they're going to put in such low effort, then they're not worth my time.
Well done Danny..you are a true gentleman who takes pride on ‘making the world a better place’ . The love of music and sound for people is a big one. Who are you going to trust? An experienced sound technician and engineer like yourself or a salesman/ reviewer? Everyone will agree. You can’t fake quality.
So much to say here! Fantastic video, I hope it goes somewhere with Andrew and Kristi. I really think they need to keep a more open mind in this area. Even if they were neutral on the subject they shouldn’t bash us that apreatiate it. Kristi kinda had a go at me in the comments section of there last video and I was disappointed, because I respect them and watch all there videos. I challenged them to upgrade the crossovers on a pair of there speakers to see the benefits for themselves. There white Klipsh would be perfect for this however I do not expect this to happen. 🤞🏼. I honestly feel sorry for people who don’t understand or trust Danny and GR Research. We as hobbiest are extremely lucky to have him mentoring our way. Crossover upgrades arnt for everyone. But man it’s sure fun knowing you have good parts in there making the speaker the best version of its self!
... their minds have been open for a long time... open to being paid for "facts", open to birds picking away their brains... open to anyone who will agree with their narrow views.
Very classy response Danny you just showed how much of a gentleman you are. I was watching the whole time thinking invite Andrew invite Andrew….and bam! 👍🏻
I find it fascinating that we are being told that you need a special room set up to listen to your speakers in the real world are a least in my world our entertainment is usually set up in our living area , everyone doesn't have the luxury of have a dedicated listen room
Very well spoken , part quality does make a huge difference. And I'm Glad you extended an invitation to Andrew. I follow both channels and I respect both of your guys knowledge.
Not suprising that Andrew and his wife would not understand that the crossovers are more important than the drive units... I can tell you from many years of experience, you can get very good results with high quality crossover components and cheap drive units, it does not work the other way round...... high quality drive units will reveal the massive improvements crossover components can make.
I find them quite entertainig. High quality videos and he's showing products at their best. Can't find anything wrong with it when someone is interested in new gear and wants some information about it. He's making comparisons to other speakers, Amps or whatever they review. Who likes to read brochures when someone does it better for you in a video!?
Crossovers are the weakest point on any speaker that are build for price point what ever is the price point, period. I upgraded my speakers crossovers with better components and it was BIG upgrade! All those cheap sandcast resistors, electrolytic capacitors and iron core coils removed with better parts was game chancer!
I bought kits for my Klipsch RF7 iiis and 600m IIs and RP0504C (center) and couldn't be happier. There IS a massive sounds difference to speakers that were already good and are now amazing.
Another point is, ,in general, the higher end higher cost speakers tend to use better parts in the x-over, wiring, connectors etc.. Why would they do that if it made no differeince? PS audio speakers for instance. Nothing but high quality parts.
I appreciate you, I love knowing what I played for and if I was taken advantage of by a manufacture, I have the Polk L600, L800, L200 and L100 thank you for shining light on the Shadiness.
well in a way Andrew is right. There is a clear segmentation in the audio equipment market. The DIY and tinkering aspect of the hobby is not to everybodies liking. And for those, who don't want to bother with this aspect, it's probably not worth it to do an upgrade. Andrew is calling this a boutique market (and it surely is, if you want this kind of parts quality from stock speakers). But even Danny kind of agrees, that it's often better to start from scratch (with one of his kits), than to try and fix something that never was intended to reach this kind of quality in the first place.
❤Andrew, his reviews are straight talk and resonate with 99% of us hobbyists who despise the hate filled forums snobbery and people telling what me what I should like. Honestly, a bit arrogant to think he’s talking about you, he was referencing his career and what he’s seen over the years.
In this hobby I am much more like Danny than I am Andrew. But I like Andrew. I think your first point is spot on, Andrew’s audience is mostly the casual listener who wants good sound and is not obsessed over the details and with that what Andrew said about crossovers is probably valid. But to your second point, while I do know about Andrew’s past and that he himself was once madly obsessed to the point where he literally endured emotional and financial stress, he was in fact talking about Danny in his comment as well. No question. He’s mentioned Danny before. Andrew used to be an obsessed audiophile with systems costing tens of thousands and I get why he became the “recovering audiophile” when he walked away from it all but I think he’s swung too far and where he could remain positive and preach the lessons he’s learned he’s chosen to be negative about it and a bit snarky at times.
I have listened to both of these men. I will continue to listen to both of these men. I do not see this as a reason to "pick a side" or turn this into some street beef-type situation.
Danny, you burst my bubble! I thought that I was the only one placing components on the positive and negative side. I feel somewhat inspired to make a crossover using a buffalo nickel as the base and using cheddar core inductors with twine insulated wires, and a gum wrapper to conseal the contents. Definitely a Mickey mouse job!
Andrew Robinson's point seems to be that upgrading a speaker's crossover may not always offer the best value. After purchasing speakers and then investing in crossover upgrades, you may have spent enough money that it would have been better to invest in a higher-quality speaker from the start, avoiding the additional work and hassle. While DIY speaker projects can be enjoyable and are a valid hobby, for the average person who may not want to invest the time and effort, their money could be better spent elsewhere. Although crossover upgrades can make a difference in sound quality, the improvement doesn't always justify the cost. Spending significant money on upgrades may only result in a marginal improvement, without addressing the inherent limitations of the speaker's design. True innovation in speaker performance comes from a ground-up approach that considers the entire design, not just the crossover. Ultimately, how a speaker measures in performance is often more important than individual component selections when it comes to how it will sound. This isn't meant to criticize anyone's choices but simply reflects a personal opinion. Cheers!
This opinion added some fog and haze to the concept. Let me tell you , even my car stereos tweeter sounds way better when I replaced factory tiny electrolyte 6.8uf for a 6usd worth audio poly cap .... Difference is significant to a trained ear , not to mention , resistors that also make a difference, than inductors , internal wiring , cabinet enhancements, binding posts upgrade and all of it improves the sound . So cheap speaker sold for 200usd can be greatly improved by spending 70usd for better caps and resistors, coils , just pick wisely to stay in this tight budget and YES it will make these 70 USD speakers sound much much better and well worth 70usd spend on better quality parts . Than if you approach 600usd speakers and say you decide to spend 140usd on parts to upgrade the crossovers the difference on such speaker will be even greater ... Proportions and logic in such upgrade is a key for it to make sense .
"Ultimately, how a speaker measures in performance is often more important than individual component selections when it comes to how it will sound." I'm not saying you're wrong, but I don't see how you can come to that conclusion. I can give you the specs to a speaker and you can't tell me how its going to sound. Let me give you a real example of what I'm talking about. I'm very sensitive to high frequencies. You can have a metal tweeter and a soft dome tweeter that measures very close, if not the same, and can sound very different in actual use. Measurements are not going to tell you that.
@@052RC I appreciate your perspective, and I agree that measurements alone can't fully capture the subjective experience of listening to a speaker. What I meant by "how a speaker measures far exceeds parts selections" is that while individual components, like tweeters, do contribute to the overall sound, the performance of the entire speaker system - as indicated by how it measures across various parameters - often provides a better indication of its overall quality and design than simply focusing on component selection in isolation. To your point, measurements might not always reveal specific nuances such as listener sensitivity to certain frequencies or tonal preferences. However, they do provide a more objective baseline for comparing performance and understanding how the speaker was engineered. So, while measurements may not tell the whole story, they are a key part of understanding speaker performance when considered alongside subjective listening tests. I fully acknowledge that sound is a subjective experience and can vary significantly from person to person. For example, as you pointed out, two tweeters that measure similarly might sound quite different to someone sensitive to high frequencies. While measurements offer an objective baseline for performance, they can’t account for personal preferences or sensitivities. It's definitely a balance between objective data and personal listening experience. Thanks again for engaging in the discussion!
@@kdomster9141 Thank you for your input. I completely understand the perspective you're coming from, and I don’t doubt that upgrading components like capacitors, resistors, and inductors can improve the sound of a speaker, particularly for someone with a trained ear. However, my point was more about the broader balance between cost, time, and the overall design of the speaker itself. You’re right that a budget speaker can be improved with better components, but there are inherent limitations in what can be achieved due to the overall design of the speaker. Cabinet design, driver quality, and tuning play a significant role in a speaker’s performance, and those factors often can't be fully addressed by just upgrading the crossover. While spending $70 on upgrades may improve a $200 speaker, it’s important to recognize that the improvements may be marginal when compared to purchasing a speaker that was designed from the ground up with higher-quality components, cabinetry, and tuning. There’s also the consideration of diminishing returns. As you mentioned, the difference might be more significant in a $600 speaker, but there comes a point where the cost of upgrading components may not deliver improvements that justify the expense. High-end speakers are typically designed with a balanced integration of all parts, not just components, so modifying one area might yield subtle changes, but won't necessarily unlock the full potential of the speaker. Ultimately, upgrading components can provide an enjoyable DIY project and can yield improvements, but I believe there's a balance between those upgrades and recognizing the limits imposed by the original design. It’s also worth considering whether the time and effort involved in such upgrades would be better invested in purchasing a speaker that already achieves the desired performance out of the box.
@@hoosierhifi5183 well, it is half truth, some 600usd speakers will use much better quality components that other 600usd speaker , proportional upgrade to 600usd speaker with 200usd of parts upgrade will vary with result of the upgrade as some 600usd speakers use a tweeter costing 15usd and sounding like it while some 600usd speakers will use much better quality tweeter costing 40usd but sounding better than some 90usd tweeters from some 3000usd speakers . My point is you can't assume as all speakers and upgrades a open book approach where you need to do intelligent analysis of what is worth to upgrade and how much to spend on what area of the speaker . Biggest point is when done wisely crossover and cabinet/posts/stands will make the speakers sound much cleaner and if they did cost much more than initial price spend on the speaker and upgrade .... Go for it and have fun observing the changes and make assessment used in your next projects . Yes even 10000usd speakers with stock crossover parts worth say 300usd can be upgraded to better quality and it will sound better , much better as drivers , cabinet, posts are all much better quality than in 600usd speaker so more expensive speaker makes more sense to upgrade. Example , Magico floor standers sold for 11000usd use Mundorf Caps worth 60usd (I know their sound and there is a ton of room for improvement with better Cap. So let's not smear the fact that upgrades almost always make sense if you care about sound quality .
Danny, It's real simple,... tell those guys to whip out a dual trace oscilloscope, and a high quality signal generator... Set the o-scope up for dual trace mode, as well as your divisions for an audio time based grid, and then put your signal generator on square wave mode.. Place one "trace", or probe directly to the output of the signal generator, then pass the signal THROUGH what ever component you want to do diagnostics on.... The scope will (WILL) show the differences between iron core inductors, sand cast resistors, and electrolytic caps VS using HQ AIR core inductors, poly FILM caps, and wire wound resistors... I've een in the industry for decades, and believe me- this simple O-scope test will show the differences in ringing, smearing, and time delays..
@@russellperry3605 YEP!... But, do NOT take my word for it... try it yourself with some on hand parts you might have laying around, .... make a simple 2/3/4 pole tweeter XO with electrolytics , then a decent grade music quality cap.. Now, you might not hear the difference between a 30 dollar cap, and a 99 dollar cap, but when compared to electrolytics, you DO hear the diference...
Danny actually has talked me out upgrading some speakers. Its not about the money. Xover upgrades have to be experienced, it’s a night and day deference. After wetting my toe on high quality components, I was hooked. Then I started buying nice and once. IMHO DIY is best. No compromises. A wise man once told me: “ When you build a race car, you are better off starting with a race car. Not a street car. Because, the street car was built to a budget, and compromises were made.”
In college, before switching to computer science in my Jr year, I was in EE because I loved speakers. I read every IEEE paper in the university library stacks about speaker design. I had an early edition of the Loudspeaker Design Cookbook. I had other books on speaker design. I don't think I've heard Danny say anything that contradicts any of that when it comes to speakers. I'm not sold on the cable stuff, but nothing about speakers sounds out of line. The room is really important for imaging and soundstage. A mediocre speaker will image more precisely in a well treated room than a great speaker in an average room. Most adults can't have that, but I was lucky enough in High School that my parents had an unfinished basement for a while and I could do whatever I wanted. The imaging and soundstage on my ~$300 diy speakers then was better than any sub $10k system I've heard at a dealer. The rest of it wasn't as good, but room really matters when it comes to imaging and soundstage. Enclosures that sounded as dead as a rock to the knuckle test helped too -- way less ringing than a solid chunk of wood.
Andrew & Kristi.... I love your reviews. I get what you're doing and why. No issues with it at all. BUT..... There's a lot of validity to what Danny is saying. I realize your not engineers and just want results and caring how the results happen isn't important. I get that we live in a world of buy good or buy better. Not picking a side, because Danny knows I'm brutally honest. Danny.... something you didn't mention. The expense to upgrade a speakers crossover isn't always going to provide enough "leveling up" to warrant the cost. The gain can be fractional on some speakers and simply isn't worth it.. Some speaker can really use an upgrade, but not all and not all are worth the investment.
@@dannyrichie9743 But that's subjective. I gave this video a thumbs up and never have done that for any of your videos. Why? It's a good explanation as to why better parts create better sounds.... in most cases. ;) Do a video on driver speed and how controlling that speed is important to sound. As a matter of fact, do a video series on speakers from A to Z, meaning cover design, driver selection, crossover builds, etc. etc. I think it would be good for the audience to understand a bit of the engineering, kind like you did in his video.
@@lithiumstaticHow can it be subjective when Danny clearly explains the speaker charts, frequency curve and waterfall ? and plus he has the experience to decide if certain upgrades are not worth it !
As usual daddy just put yourself out there as a true human being. I wish I had to resources time and money to buy your stuff and I’ll plan on saving up for some of your speakers but just you as a human being putting it out there from your heart is well worth my time to watch your videos. Keep it up, sir. You’re doing it’s all a good servicelearned a lot
He is true, only sound matters to the customer. For 99%. The 1% would like to know. But the 99% is where the money comes so ask again who cares. Not me too. I do know the speakers i use sounds good. Iw had few, from genelec G5 to "the ones" to few Klipsh models to Jamo one to and so on. Triangle antal stays. For now :D You can upgrade the crossovers and what ever, that is like changing engines intakes and adding turbo to the car, its not for everyone, maybe to the 1%.
For me there are a couple of good reasons to do an upgrade: 1: for the fun of it, on a set of speakers you like but know are flawed (likey you've had for a while or have bought cheap second hand.) 2: as a hobby project to resurrect a vintage set. You know, bring them into the 21st century. 3: As a repair job where wiring and/or other internal components have gone bad and instead of replacing, you'd rather repair and upgrade. Because you want to see how good you can get a set of Sony SCSS-5's sounding.😅 (Falls into the hobby project) However: Simply 'fixing' a modern speaker you just bought new... This is counter productive. In this case I agree with Andrew. Better to buy the speaker you like the sound of and be done with it. Doing a good audition of speakers is so important here. Andrew often says: 'Remember, the only person who has to like the sound of your system is you.' i feel this is where he's really comming from. If the crossover is a pice of tin foil and steel wire wraped around a nail and it sound good to you👍. If you don't like the sound. Don't buy. His reviews are no targeted at the diy/hobbiest. They're often at the mid-to-high end buyer that wants to know how it sounds, not really the underlying nuts and bolts. Keep up the good work Danny and GR team. I always learn something. Jordan
Hello GR Reasearch: Thank you for this video sir. What I admire about you and your company is that you don't have a hidden adjenda like other tube channels. I've been an audio enthusiast since I was young & you have educated me in many areas that when I walk into a person's home & hear some of this audio crap that is actually painful to listen to. God Bless & stay safe, TMP from N.J.
I first became aware of GR Research about 20 years ago due to Danny's excellent work on the Usher Be 718. I watch his RUclips regularly. I've seen a couple of A. Robinson's self-satisfied reviews. I don't expect to watch any more.
If you’re happy with your speakers stick with them and don’t worry about upgrades. If you want more or are interested in exploring, the upgrades are for you. I personally enjoy the educational aspect of upgrades. Like a lot of things it doesn’t have to be one or the other. Different strokes for different folks.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video, very classy and informative. I sincerely hope that Andrew reciprocates positively for the growth of his channel and for himself.
Danny you should make a test set on encores and use cheap crossover parts send it to Jay. He would be a good guy to do a fair comparison . Do a downgrade to prove your point.
i think you and Andrew are on more of the same level than you both think. the niche market he's referring to is the speaker "hot-rodders" like yourself. nothing wrong with it, just not for everyone
Danny is right about Andrew. I did upgraded two pairs of tower speakers of KLIPSCH on my own before I knew about GR Research and those speakers turned out so much better than original parts
Built (from scratch) and updated plenty of "high end" speakers. Crossover parts do make a difference. But there's always cost benefit factor and point of diminishing returns as with all speakers and audio. The human ear is so personal. But love what GR does. I'll keep watching ya. Keep it up
Andrew needs to start listening to his wife, she seams to have a better grasp of sound quality. Danny thanks for giving us options without pushing so Soy boy agenda.
When he said "who cares" multiple times in one response, referring to the importance of crossovers, he destroyed his credibility as an audio equipment reviewer for all time.
It's NUTS. I just upgraded my first crossover on a pair of 60s Sansui SP-200s. Craziest thing I've heard... I honestly never thought it would make that big of a difference. They will blow away a lot of super high end stuff now.
I think you missed his point and made his point at the same time. Here’s an analogy. He’s saying buy the car you like and if you don’t like it trade it in for one you do. Your saying buy a car if you don’t like it puts new rims, wrap it, put a turbo on it and so on. It just different preferences.
I would urge everyone to buy an older vehicle and fix it up. Less in the landfill and will likely last longer than a car made these days. I own a ‘89 190e and it will go to my kid
coming from a reseller standpoint. People don’t want someone else’s modified car or electronics many years down the road. I also HATE non oem replacement parts (3rd party iphone screens) on smart phones etc. All original or no sale! I understand upgrading the components for personal enjoyment.. lots of DSPs and settings on modern gear can do just as much as a difference to the sound. I am one of those people who want the original engineering sample sent to production… I would build my speakers from scratch otherwise using my own crossovers/scan speak drivers etc if I would go the modification route. But to each their own and have fun!
@@jwilson086 yup...ego pride pompous arrogant all knowing and yet admits his limitations of understanding, that pretty much sums up everyone born in 1980 to present. Lol.
Qudos to Danny for taking the high ground. He used it as a teaching opportunity, not getting sucked into a spat. I was dubious about being able to hear changes in components... Until i tried it. It really is astonishing what the human ear can differentiate. He also understands the psychology of the diy audio enthusiast... Some people throw money at something and want to believe they have "the best". It bolsters their ego somehow and makes them feel superior. Whereas the diy guy sees it as an incremental journey of improvement... With no expectation of ever reaching perfection, but a determination to keep striving for it. It's an interesting hobby, not a consumer fashion statement.
A cap ... That's what that was? Damn, I thought it was some kinda movie prop Darpa nuclear device that CIA Ground Branch would have. Wow, a cap ... no cap.
I own piece of B&W speakers that have reputation of unruly and coarse , but original crossover had 3usd 4.3uf Vishay Poly cap on the tweeter as a single part for its 6dD per octave crossover ....Guess what I installed KPCU01 Miflex instead , mounted it behind the speaker on a tiny shelf and it absolutely transformed the performance of that 500usd monitor speaker . I was able to hear it's phases of break in affects on sound . But it now sounds so clean, open, detailed and pleasant to the ear . It was the biggest testimony of how parts quality is a key to high resolution of sound . So if Andrew does not care he is ignorantly and he is the one losing out on his approach.
@@staceymangham Yes that's why I had to install it outside of the enclosure, Mine is 4.3uf so half of that value Danny is using there and half size and half price as well 😉
You are super respectful!!! Love what you do and agree 100%!!
Andrew said that he doesn't think it makes sense to buy speakers that need to be improved later, but it makes more sense to buy speakers that you like right from the start. And what does it matter what's inside the speakers if you like how they sound? Then everything will be fine. If you like speakers in which the manufacturer has used cheap parts, that's your problem.

That's true. Some people are okay with just okay. Some people want more.
Some people don't know when to stop either. Some people are never satisfied and never sit down and just enjoy the music. I see people "upgrading" all the time and never going to be happy. Most people are just splitting hairs when it comes to what's coming out of their system and feel they need to "UPGREADE". If that's what you like more power to you. I'll just sit back and enjoy life and music...
Why is it a problem?
What if you like the speakers when you buy them but over time notice some things that could be improved?
@@danab7472 like what? Just asking
We should be concerned about what’s inside. It can reveal what the consumer is actually paying for. It’s not for everyone but for some it does matter.
I had one guy tell me his $14 earbuds sound better than most $4000 speaker systems. And I had another idiot tell me that the specs on his computer's CD player says "0 to 50,000 Hz", therefore all music he listens to through his computer is 0 to 50KHz. And there was no convincing him otherwise.
So you are right.... there really are people who should never, ever, ever see the inside of anything.
And the really mind blowing part is, both were arguing with me on the discussion page of the wikipedia entry for "audiophile".
Absolutely!
But as Danny always says, all the manufacturer build to a pricepoint. And more people like shiny stuff than a black box with great parts inside you cannot see. So they spend money on design and build of a nice shiny box. Parts don't bring customers, high gloss videos about nice speakers do ;-)
💯 correct.
If the parts are spectacular and of immaculate standards and it is not voiced correctly it doesn’t matter. Andrew’s whole point is how does it sound stop taking everything apart and just listen to the music and enjoy. If it doesn’t sound good return it and try something new. Stop trying to fix something not designed correctly in the first place.
A well designed crossover makes ALL the difference.
I spent months learning from people and learned how to do quasi anechoic measurements of my speakers.
Then I redesigned the crossovers. After a few iterations I made a crossover that is phase coherent and quite linear. Whereas before it had a dip around 2.3khz and wasn’t phase coherent at the crossover.
I used premium parts to make the crossovers and it was kinda like getting new speakers.
Yeah it made them sound much better.
I did swap out crossover parts in real time and think I can hear a difference. ( the crossover is external so I was able to swap different parts with the same values ). I did hear some differences between air core inductors vs iron core. Don’t know so much about the caps though.
So although I dig Andrew, yes it does matter how the crossover is designed and implemented
And besides as you mentioned. It was super fun and educational. Even at 55 I love learning this stuff. It’s most of the fun actually for me.
Crossovers and associated compensation circuits do make a large difference however soft dome mid-range and tweeters will always sound different than cone mid-range and compression tweeters.
Great response/review. I love where you ultimately went with the invite for Andrew. I can personally confirm the validity of a speaker upgrade I have used. I found some Polk S20s on absolute blowout clearance. They are just on my desk in an untreated office. I thought they were dull and loose with the sound where I had to push them to show any kind of performance. I figured I like doing soldering and stuff like that so I ordered an upgrade kit and some no-rez. BOOM! At real low volumes, the sound stage was immediately full of detail as the speakers just disappeared. They voice extremely well and go way beyond any review of a stock S20. I'm sold on the work you do. I love Andrew's videos as well & would really like to see you guys get together and break bread. It would make for a fun video and probably be good for both of your channels. THANKS DANNY!
Have been listening to stereo components for over 60 years and gr research seems to be one of the most thoughtful commentators I have ever listened to online. I knew someone back in Boulder Colorado in 40 years ago whose whole business is just a little home business was to replace the crossovers with more high quality parts to improve reasonably good stereo speakers. So this guy makes sense... And his presentations are always balanced and thoughtful.
Was that Uncle Joey?
Spoken like a true gentleman. Proud to have you as a role model.
Recently I completed the Dennis Murphy Mod for my Pioneer SP-BS22 bookshelf speakers. I can say there absolutely was a great improvement in sound. The sound stage is now more expansive and deep with a smoother high end. I learned from practical hard proof: Crossovers matter. The original speakers were quite nice for the price but the upgrade took them to a new level.
Fun! Enjoy them, I did. It's too bad the BS22 is not made anymore.
"People making budget speakers put in 10 cent parts. I spend $1 and that makes a big difference." --A.J.
😊
Audio is like the automotive industry. 99% of the folks out there buy a stereo system and they are done. Then there is that 1% that likes tweak what they have. They might use heavy gauge OFC wires. They might replace their op-amps with a higher grade chips. And some might tweak the crossover. Hot rodders have been tweaking cars for years.
Great point
That's exactly who Danny is. Racing the quarter mile is another of his passions. I can't see the video right now. But I think he's wearing a drag racing t-shirt.
I quit watching Andrew a couple years ago after he made a egotistical and disrespectful response to my fair comment😂
Excellent analogy. I've never left a car stock for more than a month, and once I got into diy and customized speakers, I'll never go back. It's crazy how much manufacturers leave on the table. Upgrading the crossover parts is like going from stock garbage shocks to some adjustable Koni shocks.
@@JC-lk3oy Maybe with exceptions as it is a T50 from Gordon Murray! But not all cars and equipment are at that level, possibly none, so I understand what you mean.
A couple of years a ago, I took my Jamo 7.2 speakers in to have my bass woofers repaired. My speakers were 20 years old at the time. The repair shop gave me the option to rebuild my crossovers. There was no need to redesign, just upgrade very old and very cheap components. WOW! What a difference. I spent close to $1000, but the difference was nothing short of amazing. I think Danny is providing a much needed service. It is a shame that speaker manufacturers go cheap on the crossover components, but they do. I am sure some of the improvement was because the components were old, but I know they never sounded this good even when new. By the way, the tweeters and midrange drivers were still in great shape and nothing was done to them.
Same as the guys I know that get car systems, they buy the same speakers ect. but one guy always changes crossover ect and doesn't use the all in one block that you can buy, he does it with little resistors ect and his stereo systems sound 3xs as good.
I don't see how anyone in their right mind could hold a grudge against GR Research. Danny's videos help everyone enjoy their speakers. He demonstrates where very inexpensive speakers and components can be quite good, and improved, and, yes, sometimes points out where an expensive speaker can easily be improved or fixed by using a $10.00 resistor instead of a $0.50 resistor. And, Danny almost always uses measurements to back up his opinions. I think watching Danny's videos can improve peoples enjoyment of very cheap speakers or their expensive speakers. This is a gift. Knowing the difference between good quality and bad quality is beneficial for any material thing we buy.
His kits are much more expensive than that....
Danny has the knowledge, skills and integrity all others do not care about . Danny loves to see his customers happy .
@@MasterofPlay7yes, a crossover consists of more than a single resistor. But smaller less expensive speakers tend to have more simple crossovers.
He also puts in the time to actually create a new crossover. It's not just about the parts. Called R&D@@MasterofPlay7
@@MasterofPlay7it's high quality parts he is hardly making any money on the kits.
All I know is, I have speakers the manufacturers highly regarded ,once I tested the speakers , was quite disappointed and wanted to return them. I found out you had an upgrade kit for those speakers I bought and installed the upgrade kit , am I glad I did ,I can almost melt into the same music after the upgrade that I was disappointed before. I trust your work because the results is definite, stay unwavering some of us that know better got your back through your proven work, those that do not know ignorance is bliss
You want more drama? 🎭 Please make upgrade kits for Tekton speakers 🔊
Yes!!
HA!!!! LMAO
@@SkunkieDesignsElectronics right?
LOL that would be more than drama.
LoL 😂
Difference is, some people listen with their ears, others listen with their eyes.
EXACTLY... We are dealing with AUDIO, and make quality decisions on what we see (cosmetics)... Imagine, going to buy a fine painting for your living room, and instead of looking at it, you make your decisions based on licking it....Would you do that???
@@grahamstrahle4010 and others listen with computers, if everything in this world was perfect, which is an impossibility, the world would be a boring place.
Danny is also talking to folks with disposable income. The kind that can have it to spend 10k for what's considered a mid level amplifier or those where money doesn't matter at all and perfection does. Man I just ain't got that kinda of money, further, one person's trash is another person's treasure, just ask anyone who's ever been divorced and remarried another divorcee and had been happily married for 20 years.
Trust your ears, if it sounds good to you than it sounds good, if it sounds great then it sounds great, to you. It might not to me even after putting Danny's expensive crossovers in speakers that already cost way to much money. Power to y'all, I'm glad if you got that kinda of disposable income, I for one do not and it's my hard earned money, I'm gonna buy what sounds great to my ears, if they don't after I get them home and have broken them in they go back to where that came from and the search continues. I'm not going to void the warranty only to find out after broken in they don't sound good "to my ears"!!
When these things devolve into personal criticism they completely lose me.
I get both points of view.
For me, if the quality of the sound is (subjectively to me) is commensurate with the price, then we’re good.
DIY upgrades are a perfectly legitimate way to enjoy the hobby. OTOH, Expecting speakers to sound good with out upgrades is reasonable.
The $/sound ratio is what matters.
As someone whose solder joints look like used bubble gum, I need a decent sound from the factory.
You both have perfectly valid opinions. So let’s get back to the music.
Finally, a civilized comment without attacking any of the parties involved 👍❤
I like your practicality and common sense.
I used to watch Robinson’s channel. Just his attitude toward the “I don’t care what’s inside of a speaker.” It honestly made me very disappointed and upset to hear him say. As I said on his page “I care what’s inside my speakers.” I enjoy replacing caps let alone researching what individual caps sounds like even within the same brand! Please Keep up the excellent dedication to our speakers Danny!
I believe Andrew once said that speakers don't break-in over time. I stepped back from him after hearing that opinion.
His videos are a bit too polished and I also stopped watching them. Quality of components in any product is important.
He never had a pair for over a week. Yeah, dudes is just a Shill. Dandy Andy shines alot of shoes and he gives em that hawk tuah shine
BRAVO, DANNY!!! Great info, clearly spoken, wonderfully impartial. Thank you Bro.
Class act Danny.
Not really. Andrew & Kristi didn't say GR Research or even make that suggestion as there are many DIY folks. Therefore this public direct call out by Danny man is a bit much. An email or phone call to Andrew & Kristi would've been MUCH more appropriate and professional. A direct call out isn't a good way to win someone over or send an invite for a visit. What I see is Danny using a call out to gain attention of Andrew & Kristi's audience to boost sales. Really Danny? Really??? Not only am I embarrassed, I'm embarrassed for you.
@@lithiumstatic I see Danny putting the truth out on how parts matter, and when Andrew said 'who cares what's on the inside', I thought that was quite ill informed, to put it mildly. We shall see what Andrew is made of by how he responds.
Hello folks. I feel Andrew has a bit of narcissist behavior.
This is the second time or same type of reply as the first time. Calling out all reviewers. Now those who did visit Danny's they walk out going home. With brand new perspective.
Ride Easy
@@BootJamesOut Funny you would call Andrew a narcissist when he never pointed out anyone in specific. Who's publicly calling out who??? Danny. I won't drop him a label, but you can figure it out if you're able to be unbiased. Last don't mistake confidence for narcissism which you're clearly doing.
@@pounceonyou1958 He responded live with humility and apologetically. Something Danny would never do even though he's the one making public finger pointing call outs. Looks much more like he's using it to draw customers from Andrews channel. Really sad to see that kind of behavior. Also really sad to see biased folks patting Danny on the back for being on online bully.
I've done gr-research upgrades to rp8000f and lrs+ speakers, and they're both phenomenal.
I have RP280F's. Thinking about it myself.
@photoguybrian definitely worth it
Do you think Henry kloss tower 2 speakers or the ads L780/2 speakers would be worth the upgrade or upgrade the speakers all the way around?
@johnnewcomb5162 Yes, they're worth it.
Very gracious Danny, parts matter, and I absolutely care what's on the inside, and the info you have given us over the years is very much appreciated, thank you.
I follow and enjoy both the AR and GR channels. When I saw the original AR video, I anticipated this response from GR. Personally, I took AR's "don't care" comments in a different context. He's using the "black box" reviewing technique, in that whatever he can't hear or see from the outside is irrelevant. He's "blind testing" things such as the crossover components, dampening material, bracing and binding post material, which aren't visible to him. He can't control the decisions made by the designer and therefore "doesn't care" how the designer got to the end result, only how it fares against the direct competition with its outward characteristics (i.e. sound, aesthetics, construction). Ultimately, he's judging it by the same characteristics as the typical end consumer. I'm sure he appreciates (and can likely hear) the benefits of better crossover components, non-magnetic binding posts, etc. but he also realizes the cost concessions required at certain price points and trade-offs to be made. Perhaps, instead of saying "doesn't care", a more accurate statement would be "I don't want to know". He's relying on his senses for the review and doesn't want to influenced by the brand name on some crossover component.
Humble honest and great points. I have been around “high end” hifi with my dad since the 70s. I’ve worked with some people who are very well known in the industry. This is not bs. I built a power supply and swapped caps for a year before I landed on the right filter caps. When it comes together it is amazing.
I'm a fan of Andrew Robinson and watched that particular video, and I have to say he's wrong. I'm an electronic engineer by trade and someone who loves audio. It really matters to me the quality of the crossover and the impact it can have. Speakers that have high-quality crossover parts are unfortunately overpriced, so upgrades can be an affordable route without the financial impact.
@@robmccoy21 Why would one need to upgrade high quality crossovers? I don’t understand…
@@zizendorfBetter sound. Better clarity. Vocals are easier to understand. Details which get masked by cheap parts become more prevalent.
My first crossover upgrade was shocking with how much information was being muted by the cheap parts.
Why not just buy a different speaker?
@@ChadHuisinga That’s certainly another option. Everyone who sends their speakers to Danny are either curious or have speakers they aren’t happy with. I doubt many are buying new speakers with the intention of upgrading them. I’m sure some have. I almost did it to a pair of Sony SSCS5s.
I started upgrading crossover parts over a decade ago. I did one out of a pair of speakers so I could compare stock to upgraded. It was no contest. The stock speaker was noticeably duller and muted details. Cost of the upgrade was less than $200. This was on a $400 pair of Polk speakers. I did it to multiple brands of used speakers. Every time the stock crossovers did the same thing. Brand name speakers are always sold at a price point. The cost of the parts to a speaker is roughly 20%. Since most people aren’t even aware of crossover circuitry they are blissfully unaware of what they are missing.
But if you like your speakers as they are then good for you! You don’t need GR Research.
@@zizendorfThat's not what he was talking about. He was comparing an "over-priced" speaker with a high quality crossover with a more budget friendly speaker that is upgraded with higher quality components.
You ROCK Danny!! I've learned far more from you than any other audio RUclipsr. Anyone can plug in a speaker, listen and comment. You actually understand speaker design and have done more for the audio community than any of those other jokers. Building my own speakers was a really fun and rewarding project. Thank You!
You're always criticised by those who do less never more. These companies pay very little into research & design & expect consumers to just such up the end product.
you did very little to spell check.
Brilliantly measured and eloquent response to that thinly veiled attack from Robinson. Keep up the good work Danny, informing those of us that like to get informed as well as being open to discussion and never dogmatic. Oh and you're always a gentleman.
This may get some people riled up.
While I think Andrew could have been less condescending with his feelings towards the speaker modding/upgrading community, i very much understand his point.
He doesn't review DIY/modded equipment. His reviews have to be based on what he receives from a manufacturer or retail store. It truly doesn't matter what parts are in the product. If it's good, he explains why. If it's not, he explains why. If it's really bad, he doesn't post a review.
His channel has never been about telling viewers to buy something, take it to someone else to fix problems with it, then take it home and enjoy it.
I guarantee that, as long as he's been in the HIFI world, he understands what crossover parts do to a signal. It's just that, for the purpose of what he and Kristie do with their channel, they don't matter.
If you don't like the way a speaker sounds from the factory, don't buy it. Definitely don't buy expecting Danny to be able to work miracles and make it sound like something that would cost you $3-4K more than what you paid. Just buy one of Danny's kits and get the good stuff the first time.
Much as I don't come to Danny's channel for info on how well a particular pair of Paradigm towers might blend in with the decor of my living room, i don't go to Andrew's channel for detailed technical analysis of how they perform. I watch Andrew and Kristie to get info about it would be to live with a particular product as it comes from the manufacturer.
A fair & balanced comment!
Somebody gets it!
This!
If that's not what his channel is about, and you're right, it isn't, then he should never have made a video like that.
I really don't think he (Andrew) made a point!!!
I like your video's and find them informative and entertaining. No product is perfect and there is always room for improvement. I bought a fairly expensive pair of speakers ($2000) and discovered later that the bracing in the cabinet was not really that good. I didn't notice the issue until later when I played them at a really loud volume level. The next model of that speaker addressed that issue. Not everyone can afford to buy a new pair of speakers every couple of years. I worked a short time in the Audio Industry, and later I calibrated measuring instruments. I recognize that you are providing a valuable service to your customers and viewers.
When you took off your glasses and zoomed in on the affiliate links…
Epic!
This was brilliant.
Nonsense and tiring. I think Danny is only click baiting for his channel anymore off of more successful and better produced channels.
@@ChadHuisinga It's pretty obvious that someone trying to sell you the product isn't going to highlight any flaws in it. They're literally incentivized to portray the product in a positive light regardless.
@@ChadHuisinga Danny got called out. How is he click baiting?
Epic indeed. Ouch!
I'am a hobbyist that was buying from Zalytron on long Island back in the day. I had "the books" and some software but learned that it was much better to send the drivers out to madisound, have them analyzed, and have the crossovers designed by people that really knew how to use LEAP. That being stated, It's obvious i got my feet pretty wet and the few people that are getting into this now, should really carefully watch, listen, and understand your vids. They are 100% accurate. If I was to do another build (which im not), I would send the drivers to GR, or Madisound! But it gets to the point where one would be better off simply buying a proven speaker other than wasting countless hours trying to re-invent the wheel! Edit: as far as your upgrades, it's a great idea and small investment for people that want to keep and upgrade their "vintage" speakers, or even "fix" the newer ones that they may own! Thank you for such great vids!!!
Andrew has mentioned GR Research by name many times during live streams. He was talking about you.
I specifically remember this in regards to the open baffle decware zen master speaker. Basically saying Danny wouldn't be able to improve it because there was no crossover. I personally really enjoy that speaker, but it is a huge compromise when you go with a large wide band driver like that. The work Danny does is admirable, nad it absolutely makes a marked improvement to upgrade the crossover parts the way he does. The snark from Andrew on this is very off-putting.
@@JC-lk3oyI forgot about that, I remember that video.
My GR-Research crossover upgrades were my first introduction to how speakers should really sound and led me down the right path in my audio journey which has brought me many hours of enjoyment. In my opinion after experiencing the upgrade experience myself, anyone who thinks negatively about it doesn't know what they are talking about or are biased for some financial or other self interest.
Excellent explanation of how parts effect sound. I built a pair of your Brutes with the high end options. I could not find a speaker anywhere that performs as well for the price. I have built several pairs of speakers including Open Baffles, which are my favorite. Parts do matter! Facts are often difficult for people today, Danny you need to put more feeling into your reviews so the wannabe's can understand what your offering. Andrew is clearly a very sensitive man, he needs a hug.
"Andrew is clearly a very sensitive man, he needs a hug." LOL, he sometimes looks like he is giving himself chills when describing a product.
If people took this view in politics I think we’d all get along a lot better. Thanks for this non aggressive chat on improving life. It comes from a passionate place obviously.
The alleged shill reviewers sound like timeshare salesmen
Danny went through his bona fides recently and yet he has to address the alleged shill reviewers
One reason I build my own speakers is that the mark-up is insane and you generally get crap parts
Ignore the shill reviewers
Phenomenal explanation and analysis. Thank you!
Ouch, that hurts!! A very professional reply, factual and not emotional.
The upgrade tech talks are the best bit. I've learned so much about speaker design from this channel. The keep it simple design philosophy in GR-Research really works. I understand the acoustic physics, but the hands on design / measure / iteration approach is the best.
The guts ARE important. The high end audio industry is NOTORIOUS for not only snake oil but "reviews" that often feel like paid ads. Manufacturers have privately admitted that when they set HIGHER prices, their products are perceived as better by the high end industry in general. The budget of a product allocated to cosmetics alone can be a significant chunk of the selling price.
Fo-Sho ! - But Damm the finish on Wilson speakers Is Freakin Sweet !! ( lol
@@DarrenShaw-ev5tb LOL And Sonus Faber too! They're gorgeous. But I purchase speakers for sound not how they look.
@@zizendorf So you buy a car based on 0 to 60 and not the looks or the colour or options like leather etc? I call BS
@@carlosoliveira-rc2xt Well you can call bullshit all you want. I didn't come here for an argument. However, I did research for a year and then searched for an Audi A6 Avant. Found one, based upon 0-60. Bought it and didn't give two shits that it was silver. But, you're right, it does have a leather interior. They all do. I'd have purchased it regardless of it's color. LOL
What a splendid video. I have watched your channel for some years now. In my opinion always interesting, honest, cautious and full of fine expertise. I love your work and I learned a lot. Thank you so much. Your answer to Andrew is very kind and understanding. Your authenticity is striking.
But still I doubt whether Andrew will understand. He seems so opniated about things he clearly does not understand and is not willing to understand. A pity really.
Compliments to you Gerry! You are the best. Many, many thanks for all your wisdom and kindness!
Love the video, and Andrew can do better keeping his emotions out of certain videos.
But talking about Andrew needs to understand speaker placement is ignorant. He has detailed how he uses lasers, moves speakers around testing toe in, width, distance from the back wall, side wall etc.
Also, he worked as an editor in the hifi magazine industry. It really takes away from an otherwise inspiring way of approaching a discussion, assuming instead of understanding the background and the claims made by the person you are responding to.
I hope this results in more collabs and genuine curiosity over assumptions and division. This would greatly benefit everyone, especially us viewers 😁
I like the way you've handled this. Additionally, thank you for the detailed explanation of how it all matters in pursuit of good sound!
If he does not care about what is in a speaker, he really should not be in the speaker review domain.
Credibility is built on deep understanding and a wide base of knowledge.
Anything else may be arrogance in its true meaning
Well said my friend!
Not that I disagree, but you don't really believe that the majority of speaker reviewers, in the history of speaker reviewers, were well versed in speaker design or even a novice at design for that matter.
That being said, I wouldn't be quick to dismiss any reviewers' experience at what they do. There's always going to be two kinds of audiophiles; those who only care about how a speaker sounds and those who only care how it measures. Both are valid. And both can be completely unrepresentative of how a speaker will sound in your environment and application.
But it's always going to be impractical for me to believe that I should not trust my ears when it comes to speakers, when they can be measured, but I should trust my ears when comes to audiophile esoterica, i.e. that which is not substantiated by measurements.
Wow. Real high standards there fella. I guess you only watch 4 review channels. But honestly, it’s not a big deal. It’s just Hifi. No wrongs or rights. Andrew is right because the vast majority of folks just buy a speaker, push it up against a wall and don’t care much about its crossover. A minority of specialized audiophiles will tear into a speaker and upgrade internals. And that’s ok too. But it’s a small number of folks.
The ears are important but it does not change the fact that when the parts are different , you should hear the difference. If you don’t, go and have a hearing test.
I could review a new car. I’m not a mechanic, but that doesn’t stop me appreciating the way the car performs!
He's got a point .Don't like your speakers get a new pair - There's zillions out on the market Now if you like your speakers, and you can take them to another level then upgrades makes sense .Makes even more $ sense on older top model hi end speakers and are still great or used speakers that were purchased at a heavily discounted
price leaving the buyer extra 🍞for potential upgrades - ultimately you do have to first like the speakers you own
Thanks for the video, I'm still loving my X-statiks.
Dear Danny, I have so much respect for what you do, your dedication to improve the hifi industry, your depth of knowledge and experience that you openly share, and the time and effort you put into doing so. Since subscribing to your channel a few years ago I have learnt so much, for which I'm eternally grateful. I have yet to read any of the 904 comments already left before I started composing this one, but have no doubt they'll be along the same vein as this. Also I think you handled this with sheer character, absolute class, and dignity. Music feeds my soul. Thank you
what few seem to realize is the absolute best parts come in almost no speakers regardless of price. many 'philes have a tough time wrapping their head around that concept.
Not true!
@@carlosoliveira-rc2xt too funny. Its actually quite true. Take a look at Wilson, Rockport, Magico. They use good parts but far from great parts. Open a few up and have a look.
Danny this is a great video! I love all of your stuff and all of your passion. I also love the fact that you repeatedly mentioned the fun of it. That's why I continue to do this as an avocation. I started doing speaker design professionally starting 50 (12 years old) years ago and got an electrical engineering degree and actually briefly worked for JBL for a time in the late 70s. I went into IT engineering because I can make more money lol. IT in the past 35 years has been as good a 'wild' and exciting geek ride as there has ever been - even more that audio stuff. But as you say for speakers and audio - just the fun of it and of course there's also once you're done with it you get to sit down and re listen to all your favorite reference material to see what you've achieved and what you've lost. And testing is very important too but it's only half the story. (that also why I am a foodie that worked in restaurants for 10 years) Testing is obviously very important in the design phase and a very valuable tool for that. If i had the software and compute power now back in the 70s Yikes - i may have decided to be a speaker designer!
Andrew Robinsons video - (I do feel obligated to say in ARs defense that he never mentioned Danny GR at all) If you're not interested in what's inside then you're not interested in what's inside fair enough sir! If so then just buy a better speaker, still considering dannys point that more cost does not necessarily get better parts/design, but it doesn't mean you need to poo poo people producing / consuming peeps that just_love _to play with this stuff and of course listen . AND Danny - when you say this or that makes a HUGE difference (where you sell and profit from this - kind of a conflict of interest at least a little?!? ;)) that is also just spending much more money on the original speaker investment - based on solely your opinion. You both fully know that statement is true!!!
(side note - stuff like cheap binding post that may break much more easily , and wire used in the xover - please dont give that praise as to MASSIVE differences in speaker sound - they almost never effect the end sound unless they are just defective) I really loose any / all patience to listen on voodoo analysis, both test and listening, and I have heard so many listening tests where the improvement effects of these 'things' , gold plated power cables, etc, etc,etc - gets completely busted .... as the people making the claims in these controlled AB tests - cannot tell the difference, they just use it as marketing to line thier coffers. OK no more soap box) .
As to you Danny on some of your claims - you do sometimes make claims that these more expensive caps , etc or binding posts (for example) sound more spacious or open - you must admit - that is purely a qualitative statement of opinion based solely on your listening tests (and others may agree with you but others dont) so keep that in mind - as a VERY large percentage of high and higher end than that - audio sound - is primarily subjective and or just marketing buzz. So I am saying we can all hear good to great sound reliably - beyond that it is pure opinion. I know this from 50+ years of doing this as a student, engineer, and listening to recorded / reproduced music on systems of every possible quality.
Now having said that - anything with a passive xover is a compromise........ :)
most quote "audiophiles" (i used to be but not really anymore - I just love great sound,, not talkin about it like it was really fine wine or cheese! :)) amazingly have no clue though that building speakers with a really high qaulity passive crossover is a VERY hard and VERY expensive experience. The xover can easily be the most expensive part of a high end 3way floor standing (like yamaha ns5000) It can be very expensive and even the best passive crossover is a big compromise to me for sound especially for power and dynamics . The best way to listen to music is active speakers where the amps the crossovers and the drivers and cabinets are all a single equation for the designer.
In fully integrated active speakers you're not filtering gobs of much higher power low Z signals like you are in a passive crossover, you're not dealing directly with the inductive impedances (needing zoble nets of more Ls and Cs to equalize the impdance of the woofers huge inductance) of big woofers. Each driver in an active setup sees the direct attachment to the amps output stage transistors w/o the Cs and Ls in passive between. In an active environment you do ALL the xover implement at low levels tween the pre and power amps using compnents that are are MUCH cheaper to get the best quality. you're essentially filtering voltages not gobs of power (as in passive) or rather minuscule amounts of power. And when you split the amps up into three separate amps and each ones optimized and handles the power for just that section it opens the thing up drastically and amazingly. Also active speakers can be cheaper if you go look now at all the active monitors for recording I know a lot of people think those are too neutral and flat for audio file tastes but I always thought well what they're saying is I don't like the fact they're uncolored. To me speakers with passive crossovers in them are a definite compromise, they're like the minor leagues in baseball when you're ready to go to the show - the major leagues - you go to active.
For obvious reasons sound reinforcements uses pure active multi amping systems for 40 years, those aren't designed for ultra high fidelity they're designed for clarity and power, very high efficiency and running full blast for long periods of time. but if you use audiophile design principles for active (i currently use ATC 25mkII with each having its on focal sub6 for left right which is essentially equal to an ATC SCM100 active floor speaker) you can get ear popping clarity and dynamics - amazing results from active speakers. Again i think cost wise if you consider the amp and the cost of a good speaker and a great passive xover - a good active system can actually be cheaper you just can't switch out the amps which means for high end audio it's a no go for marketing. You see how that works amigo???
Danny - technically - You know yer stuff - you are 50% techincal / objective, and 50% subjective / pure opinion. That makes you twice as objective in my mind as almost all the other review mix of useful and noise that exists in this new era of youtube 'audiophiles'. I really wish that word not be more negative connotation / derogatory these days, rather than a label of objective understanding as it was in the past..... I know, I know old school (and at least as much new school) guy crapping about new gens.... lol :) Anyway enough of my rambling keep up the good work my friend!
I stopped watching his channel a long time ago. If I had not, going out of his way to demonstrate ignorance about speaker design would have done the trick. 🤪
Andrew is a bit of a yes man.
Me too. I stopped following that channel also because I didn't like the 'smug' attitude that I detected on their channel. GR Research emphasise that a lot of speakers are obviously made to a price point, but if the speaker is well designed then GR Research are able to make your original purchase sound significantly better for a modest outlay and bit of DIY input - and who doesn't like a bit of DIY input!
Same..he went more gatekeeper elitist, so I dropped out.
I agree. I have changed X-over parts on multiple speakers and every time, it’s a noticeable improvement.
I don't bother watching any reviewer who does not at least look inside the box. If they're going to put in such low effort, then they're not worth my time.
Well done Danny..you are a true gentleman who takes pride on ‘making the world a better place’ . The love of music and sound for people is a big one. Who are you going to trust? An experienced sound technician and engineer like yourself or a salesman/ reviewer? Everyone will agree.
You can’t fake quality.
So much to say here! Fantastic video, I hope it goes somewhere with Andrew and Kristi. I really think they need to keep a more open mind in this area. Even if they were neutral on the subject they shouldn’t bash us that apreatiate it. Kristi kinda had a go at me in the comments section of there last video and I was disappointed, because I respect them and watch all there videos. I challenged them to upgrade the crossovers on a pair of there speakers to see the benefits for themselves. There white Klipsh would be perfect for this however I do not expect this to happen. 🤞🏼. I honestly feel sorry for people who don’t understand or trust Danny and GR Research. We as hobbiest are extremely lucky to have him mentoring our way. Crossover upgrades arnt for everyone. But man it’s sure fun knowing you have good parts in there making the speaker the best version of its self!
Well said!
... their minds have been open for a long time... open to being paid for "facts", open to birds picking away their brains... open to anyone who will agree with their narrow views.
Very classy response Danny you just showed how much of a gentleman you are. I was watching the whole time thinking invite Andrew invite Andrew….and bam! 👍🏻
I find it fascinating that we are being told that you need a special room set up to listen to your speakers in the real world are a least in my world our entertainment is usually set up in our living area , everyone doesn't have the luxury of have a dedicated listen room
Watch the video again, he's specifically referring to reviewers, even goes out of his way to explain he's not talking about customers lol.
Very well spoken , part quality does make a huge difference. And I'm Glad you extended an invitation to Andrew. I follow both channels and I respect both of your guys knowledge.
Not suprising that Andrew and his wife would not understand that the crossovers are more important than the drive units... I can tell you from many years of experience, you can get very good results with high quality crossover components and cheap drive units, it does not work the other way round...... high quality drive units will reveal the massive improvements crossover components can make.
Their videos are pretty much just him reading the manufacturer's brochure. Its so insanely mind numbing listening to his stuff its beyond basic.
Yup. Feels like a paid advertisement.
Your last point is particularly salient, it confirms my experience too.
I find them quite entertainig. High quality videos and he's showing products at their best.
Can't find anything wrong with it when someone is interested in new gear and wants some information about it.
He's making comparisons to other speakers, Amps or whatever they review.
Who likes to read brochures when someone does it better for you in a video!?
@@voodooshome There really isn't any comparisons because he thinks everything is great and wonderful so he doesn't lose sponsors.
Brilliantly done. Love the integrity of this. I do hope you and Andrew get together. Keep us posted.
Crossovers are the weakest point on any speaker that are build for price point what ever is the price point, period. I upgraded my speakers crossovers with better components and it was BIG upgrade! All those cheap sandcast resistors, electrolytic capacitors and iron core coils removed with better parts was game chancer!
I bought kits for my Klipsch RF7 iiis and 600m IIs and RP0504C (center) and couldn't be happier. There IS a massive sounds difference to speakers that were already good and are now amazing.
Another point is, ,in general, the higher end higher cost speakers tend to use better parts in the x-over, wiring, connectors etc.. Why would they do that if it made no differeince? PS audio speakers for instance. Nothing but high quality parts.
I appreciate you, I love knowing what I played for and if I was taken advantage of by a manufacture, I have the Polk L600, L800, L200 and L100 thank you for shining light on the Shadiness.
well in a way Andrew is right. There is a clear segmentation in the audio equipment market. The DIY and tinkering aspect of the hobby is not to everybodies liking. And for those, who don't want to bother with this aspect, it's probably not worth it to do an upgrade. Andrew is calling this a boutique market (and it surely is, if you want this kind of parts quality from stock speakers). But even Danny kind of agrees, that it's often better to start from scratch (with one of his kits), than to try and fix something that never was intended to reach this kind of quality in the first place.
Have FUN! That conclusion to this presentation says it all!, thanks GR !! 🙂
❤Andrew, his reviews are straight talk and resonate with 99% of us hobbyists who despise the hate filled forums snobbery and people telling what me what I should like.
Honestly, a bit arrogant to think he’s talking about you, he was referencing his career and what he’s seen over the years.
In this hobby I am much more like Danny than I am Andrew. But I like Andrew. I think your first point is spot on, Andrew’s audience is mostly the casual listener who wants good sound and is not obsessed over the details and with that what Andrew said about crossovers is probably valid. But to your second point, while I do know about Andrew’s past and that he himself was once madly obsessed to the point where he literally endured emotional and financial stress, he was in fact talking about Danny in his comment as well. No question. He’s mentioned Danny before. Andrew used to be an obsessed audiophile with systems costing tens of thousands and I get why he became the “recovering audiophile” when he walked away from it all but I think he’s swung too far and where he could remain positive and preach the lessons he’s learned he’s chosen to be negative about it and a bit snarky at times.
Holy cow did I learn a lot on this one. Thank you!
I have listened to both of these men. I will continue to listen to both of these men. I do not see this as a reason to "pick a side" or turn this into some street beef-type situation.
Danny, you burst my bubble! I thought that I was the only one placing components on the positive and negative side. I feel somewhat inspired to make a crossover using a buffalo nickel as the base and using cheddar core inductors with twine insulated wires, and a gum wrapper to conseal the contents. Definitely a Mickey mouse job!
Andrew Robinson's point seems to be that upgrading a speaker's crossover may not always offer the best value. After purchasing speakers and then investing in crossover upgrades, you may have spent enough money that it would have been better to invest in a higher-quality speaker from the start, avoiding the additional work and hassle. While DIY speaker projects can be enjoyable and are a valid hobby, for the average person who may not want to invest the time and effort, their money could be better spent elsewhere.
Although crossover upgrades can make a difference in sound quality, the improvement doesn't always justify the cost. Spending significant money on upgrades may only result in a marginal improvement, without addressing the inherent limitations of the speaker's design. True innovation in speaker performance comes from a ground-up approach that considers the entire design, not just the crossover. Ultimately, how a speaker measures in performance is often more important than individual component selections when it comes to how it will sound. This isn't meant to criticize anyone's choices but simply reflects a personal opinion. Cheers!
This opinion added some fog and haze to the concept.
Let me tell you , even my car stereos tweeter sounds way better when I replaced factory tiny electrolyte 6.8uf for a 6usd worth audio poly cap .... Difference is significant to a trained ear , not to mention , resistors that also make a difference, than inductors , internal wiring , cabinet enhancements, binding posts upgrade and all of it improves the sound .
So cheap speaker sold for 200usd can be greatly improved by spending 70usd for better caps and resistors, coils , just pick wisely to stay in this tight budget and YES it will make these 70 USD speakers sound much much better and well worth 70usd spend on better quality parts .
Than if you approach 600usd speakers and say you decide to spend 140usd on parts to upgrade the crossovers the difference on such speaker will be even greater ... Proportions and logic in such upgrade is a key for it to make sense .
"Ultimately, how a speaker measures in performance is often more important than individual component selections when it comes to how it will sound."
I'm not saying you're wrong, but I don't see how you can come to that conclusion. I can give you the specs to a speaker and you can't tell me how its going to sound. Let me give you a real example of what I'm talking about. I'm very sensitive to high frequencies. You can have a metal tweeter and a soft dome tweeter that measures very close, if not the same, and can sound very different in actual use. Measurements are not going to tell you that.
@@052RC I appreciate your perspective, and I agree that measurements alone can't fully capture the subjective experience of listening to a speaker. What I meant by "how a speaker measures far exceeds parts selections" is that while individual components, like tweeters, do contribute to the overall sound, the performance of the entire speaker system - as indicated by how it measures across various parameters - often provides a better indication of its overall quality and design than simply focusing on component selection in isolation.
To your point, measurements might not always reveal specific nuances such as listener sensitivity to certain frequencies or tonal preferences. However, they do provide a more objective baseline for comparing performance and understanding how the speaker was engineered. So, while measurements may not tell the whole story, they are a key part of understanding speaker performance when considered alongside subjective listening tests. I fully acknowledge that sound is a subjective experience and can vary significantly from person to person. For example, as you pointed out, two tweeters that measure similarly might sound quite different to someone sensitive to high frequencies. While measurements offer an objective baseline for performance, they can’t account for personal preferences or sensitivities.
It's definitely a balance between objective data and personal listening experience. Thanks again for engaging in the discussion!
@@kdomster9141 Thank you for your input. I completely understand the perspective you're coming from, and I don’t doubt that upgrading components like capacitors, resistors, and inductors can improve the sound of a speaker, particularly for someone with a trained ear. However, my point was more about the broader balance between cost, time, and the overall design of the speaker itself.
You’re right that a budget speaker can be improved with better components, but there are inherent limitations in what can be achieved due to the overall design of the speaker. Cabinet design, driver quality, and tuning play a significant role in a speaker’s performance, and those factors often can't be fully addressed by just upgrading the crossover. While spending $70 on upgrades may improve a $200 speaker, it’s important to recognize that the improvements may be marginal when compared to purchasing a speaker that was designed from the ground up with higher-quality components, cabinetry, and tuning.
There’s also the consideration of diminishing returns. As you mentioned, the difference might be more significant in a $600 speaker, but there comes a point where the cost of upgrading components may not deliver improvements that justify the expense. High-end speakers are typically designed with a balanced integration of all parts, not just components, so modifying one area might yield subtle changes, but won't necessarily unlock the full potential of the speaker.
Ultimately, upgrading components can provide an enjoyable DIY project and can yield improvements, but I believe there's a balance between those upgrades and recognizing the limits imposed by the original design. It’s also worth considering whether the time and effort involved in such upgrades would be better invested in purchasing a speaker that already achieves the desired performance out of the box.
@@hoosierhifi5183 well, it is half truth, some 600usd speakers will use much better quality components that other 600usd speaker , proportional upgrade to 600usd speaker with 200usd of parts upgrade will vary with result of the upgrade as some 600usd speakers use a tweeter costing 15usd and sounding like it while some 600usd speakers will use much better quality tweeter costing 40usd but sounding better than some 90usd tweeters from some 3000usd speakers .
My point is you can't assume as all speakers and upgrades a open book approach where you need to do intelligent analysis of what is worth to upgrade and how much to spend on what area of the speaker .
Biggest point is when done wisely crossover and cabinet/posts/stands will make the speakers sound much cleaner and if they did cost much more than initial price spend on the speaker and upgrade .... Go for it and have fun observing the changes and make assessment used in your next projects . Yes even 10000usd speakers with stock crossover parts worth say 300usd can be upgraded to better quality and it will sound better , much better as drivers , cabinet, posts are all much better quality than in 600usd speaker so more expensive speaker makes more sense to upgrade.
Example , Magico floor standers sold for 11000usd use Mundorf Caps worth 60usd (I know their sound and there is a ton of room for improvement with better Cap.
So let's not smear the fact that upgrades almost always make sense if you care about sound quality .
Beautifully explained sir..i appreciate an honest person.
Danny,
It's real simple,... tell those guys to whip out a dual trace oscilloscope, and a high quality signal generator...
Set the o-scope up for dual trace mode, as well as your divisions for an audio time based grid, and then put your signal generator on square wave mode..
Place one "trace", or probe directly to the output of the signal generator, then pass the signal THROUGH what ever component you want to do diagnostics on....
The scope will (WILL) show the differences between iron core inductors, sand cast resistors, and electrolytic caps VS using HQ AIR core inductors, poly FILM caps, and wire wound resistors...
I've een in the industry for decades, and believe me- this simple O-scope test will show the differences in ringing, smearing, and time delays..
Yes it will show the difference, but is it audible to the human ear.
@@russellperry3605 YEP!... But, do NOT take my word for it... try it yourself with some on hand parts you might have laying around, .... make a simple 2/3/4 pole tweeter XO with electrolytics , then a decent grade music quality cap.. Now, you might not hear the difference between a 30 dollar cap, and a 99 dollar cap, but when compared to electrolytics, you DO hear the diference...
You are absolutely right, thanks for the video! I wish you all the best
Danny actually has talked me out upgrading some speakers. Its not about the money.
Xover upgrades have to be experienced, it’s a night and day deference.
After wetting my toe on high quality components, I was hooked.
Then I started buying nice and once. IMHO DIY is best. No compromises.
A wise man once told me: “ When you build a race car, you are better off starting with a race car. Not a street car. Because, the street car was built to a budget, and compromises were made.”
Great video 👍
Id love how humble you are and still proves obvious facts. Ill hope Andrew comes to visit so he can be upgraded.
Keep up the good work 🙏
I stand by Danny, I’m a customer and I’m impressed how well addressed is this video.
In college, before switching to computer science in my Jr year, I was in EE because I loved speakers. I read every IEEE paper in the university library stacks about speaker design. I had an early edition of the Loudspeaker Design Cookbook. I had other books on speaker design. I don't think I've heard Danny say anything that contradicts any of that when it comes to speakers. I'm not sold on the cable stuff, but nothing about speakers sounds out of line.
The room is really important for imaging and soundstage. A mediocre speaker will image more precisely in a well treated room than a great speaker in an average room. Most adults can't have that, but I was lucky enough in High School that my parents had an unfinished basement for a while and I could do whatever I wanted. The imaging and soundstage on my ~$300 diy speakers then was better than any sub $10k system I've heard at a dealer. The rest of it wasn't as good, but room really matters when it comes to imaging and soundstage. Enclosures that sounded as dead as a rock to the knuckle test helped too -- way less ringing than a solid chunk of wood.
Andrew & Kristi.... I love your reviews. I get what you're doing and why. No issues with it at all. BUT..... There's a lot of validity to what Danny is saying. I realize your not engineers and just want results and caring how the results happen isn't important. I get that we live in a world of buy good or buy better. Not picking a side, because Danny knows I'm brutally honest.
Danny.... something you didn't mention. The expense to upgrade a speakers crossover isn't always going to provide enough "leveling up" to warrant the cost. The gain can be fractional on some speakers and simply isn't worth it.. Some speaker can really use an upgrade, but not all and not all are worth the investment.
When the cost just isn't worth it then I don't offer the upgrade.
@@dannyrichie9743 But that's subjective. I gave this video a thumbs up and never have done that for any of your videos. Why? It's a good explanation as to why better parts create better sounds.... in most cases. ;) Do a video on driver speed and how controlling that speed is important to sound. As a matter of fact, do a video series on speakers from A to Z, meaning cover design, driver selection, crossover builds, etc. etc. I think it would be good for the audience to understand a bit of the engineering, kind like you did in his video.
@@lithiumstaticHow can it be subjective when Danny clearly explains the speaker charts, frequency curve and waterfall ?
and plus he has the experience to decide if certain upgrades are not worth it !
@@azar3006 The money in exchange for what someone feels is of good value. Not arguing data.
As usual daddy just put yourself out there as a true human being. I wish I had to resources time and money to buy your stuff and I’ll plan on saving up for some of your speakers but just you as a human being putting it out there from your heart is well worth my time to watch your videos. Keep it up, sir. You’re doing it’s all a good servicelearned a lot
He is true, only sound matters to the customer. For 99%. The 1% would like to know. But the 99% is where the money comes so ask again who cares. Not me too. I do know the speakers i use sounds good. Iw had few, from genelec G5 to "the ones" to few Klipsh models to Jamo one to and so on. Triangle antal stays. For now :D You can upgrade the crossovers and what ever, that is like changing engines intakes and adding turbo to the car, its not for everyone, maybe to the 1%.
How you arrive at your percentages.
99 to 1? It could be 70 to 30.
For me there are a couple of good reasons to do an upgrade:
1: for the fun of it, on a set of speakers you like but know are flawed (likey you've had for a while or have bought cheap second hand.)
2: as a hobby project to resurrect a vintage set. You know, bring them into the 21st century.
3: As a repair job where wiring and/or other internal components have gone bad and instead of replacing, you'd rather repair and upgrade.
Because you want to see how good you can get a set of Sony SCSS-5's sounding.😅 (Falls into the hobby project)
However:
Simply 'fixing' a modern speaker you just bought new... This is counter productive. In this case I agree with Andrew. Better to buy the speaker you like the sound of and be done with it. Doing a good audition of speakers is so important here. Andrew often says: 'Remember, the only person who has to like the sound of your system is you.' i feel this is where he's really comming from. If the crossover is a pice of tin foil and steel wire wraped around a nail and it sound good to you👍. If you don't like the sound. Don't buy. His reviews are no targeted at the diy/hobbiest. They're often at the mid-to-high end buyer that wants to know how it sounds, not really the underlying nuts and bolts.
Keep up the good work Danny and GR team. I always learn something.
Jordan
Hello GR Reasearch: Thank you for this video sir. What I admire about you and your company is that you don't have a hidden adjenda like other tube channels. I've been an audio enthusiast since I was young & you have educated me in many areas that when I walk into a person's home & hear some of this audio crap that is actually painful to listen to. God Bless & stay safe, TMP from N.J.
So much to be Learned by watching this Channel ! - Thank You Sir
I first became aware of GR Research about 20 years ago due to Danny's excellent work on the Usher Be 718. I watch his RUclips regularly. I've seen a couple of A. Robinson's self-satisfied reviews. I don't expect to watch any more.
Danny, this has been an Absolute First Class Presentation about what and how Upgrades that you do can be Experienced! Great Job Man!💯🔥
This is fantastic!!!
If you’re happy with your speakers stick with them and don’t worry about upgrades. If you want more or are interested in exploring, the upgrades are for you. I personally enjoy the educational aspect of upgrades. Like a lot of things it doesn’t have to be one or the other. Different strokes for different folks.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video, very classy and informative. I sincerely hope that Andrew reciprocates positively for the growth of his channel and for himself.
Man, so solid to offer a visit, love this!
Danny you should make a test set on encores and use cheap crossover parts send it to Jay. He would be a good guy to do a fair comparison . Do a downgrade to prove your point.
Great idea! I hope he sees this
This is an excellent account on the importance of parts quality in the signal path. Well done.
i think you and Andrew are on more of the same level than you both think. the niche market he's referring to is the speaker "hot-rodders" like yourself. nothing wrong with it, just not for everyone
Danny is right about Andrew. I did upgraded two pairs of tower speakers of KLIPSCH on my own before I knew about GR Research and those speakers turned out so much better than original parts
Great back to school lesson done very professionally. Brilliant.
Built (from scratch) and updated plenty of "high end" speakers. Crossover parts do make a difference. But there's always cost benefit factor and point of diminishing returns as with all speakers and audio. The human ear is so personal. But love what GR does. I'll keep watching ya. Keep it up
Andrew needs to start listening to his wife, she seams to have a better grasp of sound quality. Danny thanks for giving us options without pushing so Soy boy agenda.
And possibly reality.
When he said "who cares" multiple times in one response, referring to the importance of crossovers, he destroyed his credibility as an audio equipment reviewer for all time.
It's NUTS. I just upgraded my first crossover on a pair of 60s Sansui SP-200s. Craziest thing I've heard... I honestly never thought it would make that big of a difference. They will blow away a lot of super high end stuff now.
I think you missed his point and made his point at the same time. Here’s an analogy. He’s saying buy the car you like and if you don’t like it trade it in for one you do. Your saying buy a car if you don’t like it puts new rims, wrap it, put a turbo on it and so on. It just different preferences.
Bingo.
I would urge everyone to buy an older vehicle and fix it up. Less in the landfill and will likely last longer than a car made these days. I own a ‘89 190e and it will go to my kid
coming from a reseller standpoint. People don’t want someone else’s modified car or electronics
many years down the road. I also HATE non oem replacement parts (3rd party iphone screens)
on smart phones etc. All original or no sale! I understand upgrading the components for personal enjoyment.. lots of DSPs and settings on modern gear can do just as much as a difference to the sound. I am one of those people who want the original engineering sample sent to production… I would build my speakers from scratch otherwise using my own crossovers/scan speak drivers etc if I would go the modification route. But to each their own and have fun!
Andrew’s “who cares” response came across as hugely pompous to me. Big turn off.
@@jwilson086 yup...ego pride pompous arrogant all knowing and yet admits his limitations of understanding, that pretty much sums up everyone born in 1980 to present. Lol.
Definitely has an asshole vibe to him.
Weird you were turned on by another man anyway.
Not sure if pompous as much as pure ignorance which is just as bad, especially ignorance regarding a field that he should be well versed in.
Andy is a QUEEN
Qudos to Danny for taking the high ground. He used it as a teaching opportunity, not getting sucked into a spat.
I was dubious about being able to hear changes in components... Until i tried it.
It really is astonishing what the human ear can differentiate.
He also understands the psychology of the diy audio enthusiast...
Some people throw money at something and want to believe they have "the best". It bolsters their ego somehow and makes them feel superior.
Whereas the diy guy sees it as an incremental journey of improvement... With no expectation of ever reaching perfection, but a determination to keep striving for it.
It's an interesting hobby, not a consumer fashion statement.
Look at the size of that KPCU01 Miflex 600v cap...that baby is expensive
I saw that too, its the size of a small dog!
A cap ...
That's what that was? Damn, I thought it was some kinda movie prop Darpa nuclear device that CIA Ground Branch would have.
Wow, a cap ... no cap.
I own piece of B&W speakers that have reputation of unruly and coarse , but original crossover had 3usd 4.3uf Vishay Poly cap on the tweeter as a single part for its 6dD per octave crossover ....Guess what I installed KPCU01 Miflex instead , mounted it behind the speaker on a tiny shelf and it absolutely transformed the performance of that 500usd monitor speaker .
I was able to hear it's phases of break in affects on sound . But it now sounds so clean, open, detailed and pleasant to the ear .
It was the biggest testimony of how parts quality is a key to high resolution of sound .
So if Andrew does not care he is ignorantly and he is the one losing out on his approach.
That cap is the size of a 1 farad stiffening cap for a car audio system
@@staceymangham Yes that's why I had to install it outside of the enclosure, Mine is 4.3uf so half of that value Danny is using there and half size and half price as well 😉