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In the Forum: Didital Things
In the Thread: NESPA Optical Disc Finalizer
Post Subject: NESPA Optical Disc FinalizerPosted by Romy the Cat on: 2/5/2006

The visitors of my site who have read my observations about the CES 2005

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/TreeItem.aspx?postID=1918

are familiar with my very positive impressions about NESPA Optical Disc Finalizer.

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/TreeItem.aspx?postID=1921#1921

It is defiantly a wonderful devise that I might from a certain prospective to be called revolutionary (people who knows me personally know that I do not throw the ejectives like this without reasons). The effectiveness of the NESPA devise is so high that any person who demands any more or less tolerable Sound from CD should have their discs to exposed to the optical “finalization”. Still, using the NESPA Optical Disc Finalizer for a while and preserving my reputation of a person who is not easy satisfied I would like to share with the readers of my site some concerns of mine regarding the NESPAnisation. Well, I do not have “concerns” but rather a concern as a half

The half of the concern relates to the current state of NESPA distribution and resale. It looks like NESPA’s devise is being distributed by Steven Klein, the “Sound of Silence” guy. Knowing the history and reputation of this guy and recognizing his infamies sleazy sales “techniques” it would not be mistaken to presume that your juts not overpay for NESPA but you stupidly overpay,

The sophisticated photographic flashes with power that zillion times more then NESPA, super sophisticated PS, smart voltage gain circuitries, and stuffed with logic that can drive a personal computer cost a couple hundred dollars. The flimsy little NESPA with funny flimsy flash form a disposable cameras, events counter and 50c-worth disk spanner Mr. Steven Klein wanted to self for near $900. Japan’s retail price for NESPA Pro is $400 and as we all know the street price in Japan even cheaper. Around US have already pop up resellers and the direct Japanese resellers who offer NESPAs for half of the Steven’s price . I feel that when the “freshness” of this devise will go aways it will settle with $300 – the price that it should cost. If the NESPA would sold in CompUS, or MicroCenter or  Radio Shack instead of Hi-Fi dealers then it would not be more then $70-$100. Sure, in the CompUS case it would not be a situation when next to a NESPA will be staying an audio-whore who would assure you that he loves you and music….. Well, I do not want to overly starch the price point. I do not mind to pay and practically for a good thing, but the situations with the NESPA’s prices make me intellectually disturbed. I personally paid for my unit much more then it should cost and I feel that Steven Klein well deserved my money as he informed me about the devise.  Still, if you are in a middle of night in your home looking for a cigarette then how would you feel if you neighbor offer to you a cigarette for $437?

As I said the NESPA’s dealer’s price policy is not a full point of my concern but rather a half point. The main point is the actual Sound of NESPA. Do not get me wrong: the NESPA optical finalization is superbly effective but along with the huge amount of overwhelming benefits that NESPAnisation offers there is an “issues” that I personally can not resolve yet. While NESPA strips all digital artifacts out of Sound it also slightly damps sound. This damping is very interesting. Initially I thought that I feel this damping as the side-affect of my hearing tuned to the artifacts of digital reproduction. Then, I began to look further into Sound I ended up after the optical finalization.  It is always; I mean always always always I felt that after the optical finalization my CD playback needed to add a very-very little at high frequency. It was not deception and not the residue of AB ceremony (I never se AB as any creditable reference, there are more objective methods). As you know I have a volume adjuster that allows me to set my tweeters at a very fine point of transition slope (and do it by very natural means)

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/TreeItem.aspx?PostID=1487

My system uses no Eqs. None of the components, or cables, or other my things I picked using their frequency extension as a meaningful criteria. Still, my CD, Tuner, 3 different tonearms with 3 different phonostages produce pretty much identical sound with regards to frequency balance. It never come to me mind that flipping from my FM broadcasts to CD or to Analog I should make a few clicks on my tweeter attenuator, adjusting the tweeters level. However, with NESPA-treated CD I need to do it. It is absolutely essential to note that after the NESPAnisation and minor adding of HF Sound become WAY more interesting then without the NESPAnisation. But the necessity to change the HF balance after the optical finalization was finished is something that I do not like in this NESPA story.

I do not think that it would be a lot of people in audio who would agree with this finding of mine. Here is why.

There two reasons why. First of all most of audio people use fundamentally wrong tweeters, fundamentally wrong tweeter’s crossovers, and fundamentally wrong tweeter time alignment. Secondary, most of the audio people have completely idiotic perception how HF should be reproduces. Most of them do not expect or understand properly reproduced HF sound and their awareness chase in their heard the habituated sounds of HF distortions. Those low sensitively loudspeakers that demand the PP amplification with their typical HF crap, the metal coned tweeters, the high order crossover and many other things that are so popular in audio nowadays that the average audio Moron is completely tuned and addicted to artificial “attractive” HF. Pick any person from audio crowd and talk with him/her about the HF. As soon you hear from him/her morn mentioning of “resolutions”, “air atop” and etc then let him/her go labeling his/her as an Audio Moron. To aggravate the point further, “they” make live music to sound like titanium tweeters (quality and tuning of musical instruments, playing and recording techniques, acoustic design of concert halls and etc). Therefore, even after that NESPAnisation a typical Audio Morons still uses the faulty HF solutions, has faulty expectation and still welcome in him/her listening rooms the presents of the artificial HF Sound. I am pretty sure that this artificial HF Sound offset and mask the NESPA sound damping….

How else could be explained the HF balance difference between my FM, analog and NESPAnised CD in context of my alleged civilized HF environment?

Rgs,
Romy the Cat

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