Thanks all for the very interesting responses. There's certainly a lot to get through and refer to on this thread.
I've been exposed to HiFis all my life, back to the 1970's, with my father being a Hi Fi enthusiast. Hum in sound was not generally heard on home hifi, but cine seemed to be the poor relation.
The hum is something that appears mainly in silent sections, with louder passages masking over the hum, but I'm conscious that its there. Recently I purchased an Eumig mark S, using a tube amp and I was struck how pleasant the sound was, in this case using an external speaker, and not much hum at all. Even though its not a HiFi source the sound did not seem so crude as it had less background noise to compete with.
Often my projectors are plugged in either a P.A amp (which has no bass/ treble controls) or and AV amp, on which the bass/ treble controls are hidden away in the software, rather than a physical knob. The AV amp is set to neutral settings for content off Bluray etc and sounds perfectly good.
It just makes sense to have the equaliser just to remove the hum from the various film projectors output, to tidy up the general sound, before it enters one of these external amps.
I sometime use headphones for listening too.
The 'cleanest' audio I get is from 2 B&H TQIII's, and is very nice. My Elfs follow a peg down (they have audio outs added). The 3 Elmo st1200s again below, with the Eumig 710s at the bottom. The Chinon 7800h is also quite hummy. I listen to the audio from other formats, old and new and enjoy hum free sound, and want to get something better out of the cine equipment.
I thing I would go for an equaliser when one becomes available.
I've been exposed to HiFis all my life, back to the 1970's, with my father being a Hi Fi enthusiast. Hum in sound was not generally heard on home hifi, but cine seemed to be the poor relation.
The hum is something that appears mainly in silent sections, with louder passages masking over the hum, but I'm conscious that its there. Recently I purchased an Eumig mark S, using a tube amp and I was struck how pleasant the sound was, in this case using an external speaker, and not much hum at all. Even though its not a HiFi source the sound did not seem so crude as it had less background noise to compete with.
Often my projectors are plugged in either a P.A amp (which has no bass/ treble controls) or and AV amp, on which the bass/ treble controls are hidden away in the software, rather than a physical knob. The AV amp is set to neutral settings for content off Bluray etc and sounds perfectly good.
It just makes sense to have the equaliser just to remove the hum from the various film projectors output, to tidy up the general sound, before it enters one of these external amps.
I sometime use headphones for listening too.
The 'cleanest' audio I get is from 2 B&H TQIII's, and is very nice. My Elfs follow a peg down (they have audio outs added). The 3 Elmo st1200s again below, with the Eumig 710s at the bottom. The Chinon 7800h is also quite hummy. I listen to the audio from other formats, old and new and enjoy hum free sound, and want to get something better out of the cine equipment.
I thing I would go for an equaliser when one becomes available.
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