Vanquish
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Okay guys .... now that we have covered the basic fundamentals of ICE and it's various components, let's move on a slightly heavier topic. We've heard of folks going on and on about Sound Quality and they prefer their set up to be tuned towards obtaining the best SQ. The following write up hopefully helps to shed some light on the gamut of SQ, starting with definitions, philosophy, how it is judged in competition, and then how to get proper SQ in a car taking all these into consideration. I will be as detailed as I can without getting too carried away in hard-to-understand technical jargon. But please bear with me fellas ... this is a VERY technical and complicated topic**********************************************************So what is Sound Quality? SQ is that aspect of a sound system, which encompasses all of the performance factors which give the system the ability to re-produce an accurate and life-like rendition of the original recording as perfectly as possible. It includes factors such as tonality, ambience, subtle nuance, system gain structure, dynamics, transient response, and the list goes on and on. SQ is a combination of all these technical factors as well as proper speaker placement and proper system design. When a system is said to have perfect SQ, it generates the most accurate sound possible, with a sense of musical realism that gives the listener the impression that they "hear" a live performance right in front of them, as if the listener was in the audience watching the actual performers on an actual stage. Now, to get this realistic musical "sound stage" in a car, it takes careful system planning, speaker placement, and tuning.This holds true in competition organizations as well. Sound systems are judged according to how well they re-create the "live" performance that was originally recorded. Judges are encouraged to attend as many live concerts as they can to learn how they should sound in such areas as tonality, dynamic impact, listening room ambience, and each musician's placement on the stage they are playing from. During SQ judge's training, a small "reference" home audio system is set up to train the judges on how the music was recorded and how it is supposed to sound in a properly-setup vehicle. The competition organizations produce their own CDs, which contain a variety of musical selections chosen to test the limits of sound systems in a wide range of aspects. These selections include orchestral works, a variety of instrument soloists, vocalists (both male and female), opera, choir, percussionists, as well as dynamic tracks. A good SQ system will reproduce ANY type of music as realistic as possible without any sense of distortion. The judges use these CDs in each car at a competition and score each system on how well it reproduces the recordings based on what the music "should" sound like live. The judges are intently familiar with the material on the CDs they use and look for problem areas during the car's evaluation.So, in laymen's terms, a system with proper SQ in one where you can sit in the seat, close your eyes, and *feel* as if you are sitting in the audience at a live performance. Seems simple enough, right? We'll see.Let's begin with definitions of some aspects of sound that give a system "quality."