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翻訳の問題を報告
paper cones are used for reasons (other then to "cheap out" as you call it) , which alters the sound and movement of the cone , foam suspension is again lighter and more responsive then a rubber suspension. there's a reason that high quality speakers use paper cones and foam suspensions , and trust me , plenty of them still do. and it has NOTHING to do with cheap.
I personally run a Denon receiver and have 2 bose 301's sitting beside the dual monitor setup , the 301's are about 6 or 7 years old and still sound as good as the day i bought them.
I have Bose speakers in my TV setup as well those are all 901's though and run off a Marantz receiver.
Bose is a very good speaker , known to re-produce very natural sounds (especially the 901's) , there's a reason they are popular and even the 2nd hand market on them is very good and can still fetch a premium price for them.
silicone or rubber surrounds are softer and more flexible than foam
Polk Audio T15[www.amazon.com] <$90 sale
Yamaha R-S202BL[www.amazon.com] ~$150
Acoustic Audio PSW600-15[www.amazon.com] ~$200
Not to shabby under $450 all said and done.
Seriously go for.....thank me later.
Don't buy speakers made by computer manufacturers, they know nothing about sound.
You get what you pay for. Unless you want to pay A LOT then there will be weaknesses in the system.
It also depends what you are listening to. Most PC sound sources ( youtube, games and so on ) are just not good enough to justify a lot of money. BUT if you listen to high quality music tracks on them, then yes, it is worth spending money. For games and so on, £100 is enough. For music £100 sounds good, but £1000 sounds great, £20,000 is awesome .. and any more than that is just showing off!
I own b&w 600 series, i think you could buy the whole set for 2000$ now (used items).
I second what some ppl here said: Make sure you have adequate amp to drive your speakers.
For pc tho, i prefer using headphones. Audeze lcd2c with jds atom dac/amp is a great combination if you want clear and impactful bass
Also have a Yamaha RX-V385 receiver, and a Polk Audio PSW10 sub, and it's perfect for me.
stay AWAY from these cheap logitech or whatever 2.1 systems theyre all terrible.
They were made and sold as an inexpensive alternative to the new (at the time) Bose "Acoustimass" satellite speaker systems -- and they rocked the audiophile world because they sounded better than the equivalent Bose setup, and exposed the awful truth that people were largely paying for a Nameplate when they bought Bose.
Cambridge Soundworks speakers was like Two Buck Chuck beating out all the fancy wines in blind taste tests.
The Bose Companion 50 caught my attention more than anything else for these reasons:
-the speakers and the subwoofer (included, unlike bookshelf speakers and studio monitors) look rock solid and I care about quality and durability
-great design
-sound is definitely great, but how great?
-curved satellite design for a wider sound stage and a surround effect, but not real surround
-the subwoofer goes down to 20 Hz which is fantastic and something I care about
-very simple to connect
-control pod for volume, tap to mute, hold to disable automatic sleep mode
Yes, this. I'm still using a Logitech 4.1 Z560 setup from 2001 (!!). I use them mainly for music when I workout (hooked to my PC) and the sound from them is still excellent. I think they would make an outstanding, cheap 5.1 setup for a theatre room actually.