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    Tigerfox Immerse 360 Review

     

     

    Audio: Listen to this article.

     

     

    Tigerfox Immerse 360

    An in-house-portable immersive audio system

     

    Main TigerFox Logo - Tiger PAW extends most here .jpg

     

     

    Once in a while, something happens to you, and you cannot describe your reaction.  Do you remember the first time you heard —A Great Horned Owl in the Woods on a winter night, Led Zeppelin, Stairway to Heaven, or A Family of Coyotes Talking to each other on a summer evening?  Your brain is at a loss, and your emotions swing.  

     

    My first experience with the Immerse 360 was at the 2022 Axpona Audio Show.  I was stunned and confused by the demo. Yet I was amazed. Is this the future?  How the heck did this thing work? Was there a gimmick?   It is 18 months later, in June of 2023, and I finally have a path to navigate for this review.


    Here are my first impressions after I first listened inside the Tigerfox Immerse 360:

     

     

     

     

    Background 

     

    I started building my 7.1.4 ATMOS audio-only playback system last fall, which I completed early this year.  After spending a lot of quality time in and around the listening chair, I have a good idea of what ATMOS can do.  I also have the words and experience to describe the Immerse 360.  While the ATMOS system was built for different reasons, it has proven to me that immersive audio is here to stay in my listening rooms.

     

    One of the keys to immersive system design is the correction for the room, the speakers, and the first arrival time to the listener's ears!  Timing is everything.  In my ATMOS system, these corrections are done via Digital Signal Processing software and proper room measurements, with custom correction profiles which are very effective.  

     

    If you look at the setup of my ATMOS system, its design is primarily near-field.  Everything is contained in a 12ft x 16ft space with less than 8ft ceiling height.  Near-field listening helps improve the overall sound by bringing the direct sound closer to the listener.  


    On the other hand, the Immerse 360 pod is a portable single-listener near-field system designed to provide the proper timing of first-order reflections where the music is presented to the user as an immersive sound field.  The roll-up wall is an acoustic soundboard reflecting the speaker's audio to the listener and, on the outside, reflecting away extraneous sound. Pure Physics!  This system concentrates the audio inside the pod, reducing power needs and controlling the sound field. Finally, the wall is black, reducing visual distractions.  

     

    Some will balk at the presence or the look of the Immerse 360, but with the fast setup and take-down, that is simple to mitigate.  

     

    Over the last few years, I have learned that spatial data can be heard in many 2-channel recordings. Our standard 2-channel playback systems launch that information into the room environment, where most of it is destroyed by reflections, crosstalk, and timing errors.  Headphone listening demonstrates this as well.

     

     

    The Path

     

    It has been a rather long road to get where I am today!  Some of the steps along the route are worth talking about.  

     

    The TigerFox team has used Apple iPhones, the Apple Dongle DAC, or other USB DACs like the AudioQuest Dragonfly series.  The DAC is then cabled to the speakers, chiefly Studio Monitor types.  I set up the Immerse 360 with an eclectic list of speakers and designs.  I have used multiple DAC and Streaming Amplifiers in the system.  I have decided that I do not need to go overboard.  While $20,000 of hardware in the system's front end was terrific, it was also unnecessary and out of character for a $479 portable room in my use case.

     

    One of the critical portions of the setup process is placing the wall ends against the speaker's side!  This can create issues with existing stands where the baseplate interferes with the pod wall.  You can see this problem in the setup shot of the LS60 speakers.    


    We mitigated that manually after that shot.  My friend Chris was shocked at how much better it sounded with the wall aligned.  Physics Wins Again!  Thanks to the folks at Holm Audio for allowing me to listen one late evening!

     

     

    IMG_1193.jpg

     

     

     

    SPEAKERS
    (Choose wisely)

     

    I have set up the following speakers in the Immerse 360 and will briefly outline my observations.


    JBL 305B
        This is the first speaker I heard at Axpona, and DAMN, it works well.

     

    M-Audio BX-5
        These were my first studio Monitors.  They are old, and they are not up to the task.

     

    Dali Minuet SE
        I set these up with an Arcam SA-30, and they did not do it for me.  Sad as they sound great on their own.

     

    Kali IN-5
        Something about the concentric tweeter messes with the physics, and they do not sound right at all.

     

    Dali Calisto 2C
        These have a dual tweeter system, which also messes with the physics.

     

    Heavenly Soundworks 517
        The best sound in the Immerse 360 I have heard.  

     

    Audio Engine A2+
        For $270 a pair, these win the low-cost award. They sound great, and this is a winning combo with the small sub (another $299).

     

    Sonos Move (pair)
        OK, laugh at me all you want.  These work exceptionally well in the pod.  

     

    KEF LS-60
        I was initially astounded at how they sound, but I must evaluate them further.  Again they are also out of the cost profile I want to use.

     


    Accessories and People

     

    I have been fussing over just the right chair for the Immerse 360.  I borrowed folding chairs, test-fitted old chairs, and so many chairs!  Comfort is essential so is lower seat height so that your ears are correctly placed in the vertical plane.  I am working with the two Ikea chairs suggested by the TigerFox team.  I am a lot closer to “Just Right.”  Oh, storing extra chairs is a lot worse than equipment boxes!

     

    Speaker stands have been another piece of the puzzle. The base gets in the way of the bottom of the pod wall; the stand is too flimsy or too heavy to move in place.  I have a solution I will talk about towards the end of the review.

     

    Wires are the bane of my existence!  Passive speakers have the advantage that they only need speaker cables.  Active speakers simplify the full setup but need power, and interconnects run out to the speakers. 

     

    Smartphones and Dongle DACs have wires running between them and out to the speakers.  Is there no end to cables?

    I have a solution; read on.

     

     

    More Physics

     

    Before I get into some sound comparisons, I want to talk more about physics.  A few years ago, I was getting my annual physical, and the nurse measured my height at 5’ 5”.  Which is about 2” shorter than when I was younger; gravity sucks! This is a time when being a short person is an advantage.  I have some friends who tower over me, and they do not get the best experience. Very tall individuals need to plan how they will get proper head placement in the Immerse 360.  Bean bag Chair?  Yoga Pose?

     


    My TigerFox system
    Setup and Listening


    IMG_1201.jpgThe combination of the TigerFox Immerse 360 and a pair of Sonos Move Speakers gives me a fantastic immersive sound system that I can set up in almost any room of my house.  All run on batteries with no wires.  My system is controlled with either an iPad or an iPhone.  I like using my iPad mini with Apple Pencil as the controller hardware.  

     

    Sonos limits the audio bit rate to 24/48 PCM on the S2 systems like the Move speakers, so do not expect to play DSD 1024.  The Sonos App has an extensive menu of integrations to select from.  In addition, the Move is an Airplay device.  

     

    My base setup is Sonos Radio and Apple Music, with BandCamp and SoundCloud for direct artist interactions and Focus@will for sound therapy.

     

    The Sonos Move speakers are the stereo listening system in my Living Room.  Since they are battery-powered, they can be taken from their docking rings to any location in the house as long as the Sonos network reaches them. 

     

     

    IMG_1259.jpgSpeaking of “Time,” I will start with Pink Floyd’s Time from the Dark Side of the Moon.  I created a  playlist on Apple Music for this review, the first track is Time from the 50’th remix in ATMOS, and the second is the original version from 1973, also on Apple Music. 

     

    NOTE:  I am out of my comfort zone diving down to individual tracks. Usually, I would be listening to the whole album: “As the Artist Intended?”

     

    The only reason for both tracks is to understand what has changed from the original.   I enjoy the new release.  The sound placement is precise and easy to track when listening in ATMOS on my 7.1.4 system.  Listening in the Pod with 2-channel speakers, the sound placement comes from the exact locations as the ATMOS playback!  It is uncanny.  

     

     

    IMG_1260.jpgNext, I want to introduce you to Todd Boston. Todd is a musician, producer, and composer.  Todd has an “Hope” album that you can find on Apple Music in the original and ATMOS under “Hope Deluxe.” Grab the track “Spiral”  from both into a playlist for convenience.  Todd used his mastering skills to build the ATMOS version, and the new version is haunting!  Sitting in the Immerse 360 enhances the sound of the entire experience with the reduction in outside stimulation.  In this case, I prefer listening to this track in the Pod vs. the ATMOS system.  

     

     

     

    IMG_1261.jpgHere is a second introduction.  The Artist is BT.  The album is from 2006, “This Binary Universe.”  You can read his biography on Apple Music.  BT has given us many gifts, from his music to software engineering and audio plug-in development!  Check out Stutter Edit 2 in iZOTOPE:  

     

    I'm BT, and This Is Stutter Edit 2:

     

    This Binary Universe is a stereo album with some fantastic immersive content hidden inside.  Try this one on your best headphones to start with.  In the Immerse 360, you must listen to the whole hour and 14 minutes of the album!

     

    Rick O’Polka at TigerFox has a collection of tracks he uses for demoing the Immerse 360.  I converted that playlist to Apple Music here.

     


    Is this the end?

     

    I always dread the end of an article.  First, it feels so final; second, I worry I missed something or went astray.  In this case, I feel torn inside. I have two immersive sound systems.  One that looks forward in my ATMOS 7.1.4 and one that screams hey do not forget what is already here.  Both are single-listener systems that only have one sweet spot per system. I only have one “perfect” chair to use in both systems.  I am torn when casually listening in the Living Room: I wonder what this would sound like in one of the immersive systems. I am torn when I want to share the immersive audio experience with others.  Nothing is perfect, and I always seek the right balance.  I am the only one who sits down to listen on purpose to listen to music—building the ATMOS system in the basement to not interfere with others’ entertainment.  

     

    I hope I have been able to convey the value and experience of the Immerse 360 to you.  I also hope that you understand the trade-offs. I have assembled a system that is easy to set up and tear down.  There are no wires to deal with, and you can use the system in almost any room in your home. 

     


    One (two) More Thing(s)


    I have been setting up the Pod in the center of my listening room to listen to immersive 2-channel music with the Sonos Move speakers. 

     

    I assembled a two-speaker support from a cut-down shelf clamped to a hefty Monolith 28 speaker stand in the middle.  This way, the speaker stand does not interfere with  Immerse 360 wall.  The move speakers sit so that they hold the wall ends in place!  I enter and exit the Pod by opening one side.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    I have been listening extensively in the Pod over the last couple of weeks.  My second system design is a bit more conventional and has wires!  I love the AudioEngine A2+ speakers even without their sub.  Using the JDS Labs Element III DAC/preamp puts it over the top.  I can also switch to headphones to compare.  I have not decided about using the IsoAcousitcs stands.  The wiring is all out of the way.  I mostly use Apple Music on the iPad for playback in this system. 

     

     

    Tigerfox Immerse 360 setup using the Audio Engine A2+ speakers.


    Using a single speaker stand with a shelf attached to the top, I have aligned the shelf with the speaker placement markers on the base.  The speakers are on Audioengine small wedge stands.   I have notched the ends of the shelf to hold the ends of the Pod walls in place next to the speakers.

     

    IMG_1255.jpg IMG_1258.jpg

     

    IMG_1264.jpg IMG_1266.jpg

     

    IMG_1265.jpg IMG_1268.jpg

     

    IMG_1269.jpg IMG_1272.jpg

     

     

     

    Equipment List

     

    • Two Sonos Move Speakers    $800
    • Audio Engine A2+        $269
    • JDS Labs Element 3        $450
    • iPad mini 5            $499
    • Tigerfox Immerse 360     $479
    • Two Flexson Stands        $300 (in the Living room)
    • One Monolith 28in stand    $60

     


    Where do I go from here?

     

    Both my ATMOS system and the Immerse 360 could be considered unconventional.  One has twelve speakers, and the other has this wall you set up in the room. One has more wires than 99.9% of systems; the other has no cables and relies on batteries.  I have two more ideas for immersive audio systems, and the hardware is on the way for one!


    Note.  Thanks to Rick O’Polka for assistance in understanding the design and goals for the Immerse 360.  Also, thanks to Tony Tang for the Axpona videos.   

     

     

     

     

     

     




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    The science behind this is rather simple to understand. The pod is basically a small horse shoe auditorium. A room in room. The sound of such design had been studied extensively in concert hall design. The effect would be rich sense of envelopment of sound wrapping the listener. A more focused sound. 
     

    Is it immersive?  Is it 3D? That depends of the understanding of the the true meaning of immersive or 3D is audio. You have heightened feel of sound coming from all direction due to reflection. Can the inherent stereo interaural crosstalk be reduced or masked?  No. 
     

    ATMOS, multichannel , Aura 3D and others are just a step forward to deliver closer to the  binaural sound to the listener.  Even stereo too is an early attempt to produce the front stage to match the cinema screen. 
     

    So what 3D sound is encoded in stereo recordings that need to be retrieved? None. You only need to ensure that they are delivered correctly to the ears so that the brain is convinced that the sound from the soundscape of stereo phantom stage are real sound as one would hear in natural event. 
     


     


     

     

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    Any system that supposed to minimize the crosstalk will produce better separation of the instruments and clarity. It will help to distinguish sound that generally goes unnoticed in conventional stereo playback. The difference is obvious ( provided done correctly) and overall more natural experience.

     

    This can be easily demonstrated by using your standard stereo.

     

    For examples:-

     

    1) Listen to Sonny Rollins Solitude in Way Out West. With crosstalk cancelled system you will notice the clinging sound isolated and floating separately. Previously, this sound was not even noticed n typical stereo despite its being there. But once you heard them in the crosstalk cancelled system you would now also notice it in stereo.

     

    2) Peiju Lien - Whisper (MA Recording). You will hear bird chirping ( very faint and not part of the intended recording) but that sound was so buried that it will not be easily detectable although audible in typical stereo playback. When I thought it was a bad recording, I was told I was hallucinating but it’s there and audible but without crosstalk cancellation or reduction it would not be distinct and standard out among other sound.

     

    These difference are the result of 3D production of the stereo playback. This can happen if TF360 is doing some sort of masking of the inherent IAC.

     

    Whether the sound of TF360 is similar to ATMOS playback can easily be proven with a $100 binaural mics. The difference would be obvious. But I understand why one would hear them similar like ATMOS…..the brain is good at recreating the sound scene in the head based on what’s previously heard. A simple binaural mics would prove otherwise.

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    A question - besides the great immersive effect you get here, could this also be a workable solution for a working from home setup to keep noise out?

     

    If I could fit a smallish desk for a monitor, keyboard and mouse, and my Genelec speakers, I'd be very happy. I'm losing a study room soon, and could use this as my "office" as needed.

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    @ROPolka: Wondering as part of the R&D process, what "standard" speakers did you use to develop this product with?

     

    As per discussions, this device is a "room within a room" product that introduces boundaries for the purpose of creating reflections all around the listener. As such, do you have any measurements you can show of the change in frequency response with and without the Tigerfox360 in a typical room you're testing this in? This might help the consumer understand the accentuations in frequency response we might see for speaker selection.

     

    Also, I'd be curious about potential comb filtering effects.

     

    Thanks.

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    On 7/21/2023 at 6:59 PM, jjraffin said:

    A question - besides the great immersive effect you get here, could this also be a workable solution for a working from home setup to keep noise out?

     

    If I could fit a smallish desk for a monitor, keyboard and mouse, and my Genelec speakers, I'd be very happy. I'm losing a study room soon, and could use this as my "office" as needed.

     

    Great question. Would definitely be interesting to know if there's any kind of "isolation" effect outside the cubical of sorts.

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    38 minutes ago, Archimago said:

     

    Great question. Would definitely be interesting to know if there's any kind of "isolation" effect outside the cubical of sorts.

    I do not feel that the noise reduction is enough if there are others in the room.  It is better than the old cubical walls in offices in some ways.  

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    9 minutes ago, bobfa said:

    I do not feel that the noise reduction is enough if there are others in the room.  It is better than the old cubical walls in offices in some ways.  

     

    Thanks. I assume if you were to hear some isolation, it would only be the higher frequencies being attenuated. (Hence related to the question about frequency response change above.)

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    I have not measured the difference between standing outside and sitting inside.   I "feel" the ambient sound reduction when I sit down.  

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    My comments to bobfa for his excellent report about the TigerFox® Immerse 360® sound system to the audio community

     

    Thank you bobfa, for an outstanding job of accurately explaining this new immersive audio product and technology (the physics-based TigerFox Immerse 360 sound system) that’s not only entirely different, but complicated, difficult-to-describe, and even more confusing-to-understand. 

     

    Those familiar with your strict, factual-based reporting appreciate your well-researched and objective review that gives credibility to this illusive product and helps convey the value of its unique experience to others in the community. More so, I’m humbled to say, than the train-wreck of the TigerFox360.com website itself!  

     

    Your report now allows those who have had legitimate reservations about what it is and how well it works, to understand it better. Especially those who have not personally experienced what it’s capable of doing by revealing and enhancing the immersive content otherwise hidden inside of stereo recordings.

     

    I feel it helped immensely that you are also closely familiar with an incredible top-quality Atmos 7.1.4 immersive object and speaker-based system that was setup by you right next to the TigerFox Pod to critically compare its immersive audio results to! This adds even more authority to this report.

     

    The 5 Most Important Take-Away Points

    After taking some time to reflect, I think the most important 5 take-aways in your report to the audio community (correct me if I’m off) are that:

     

    1. You communicated quite well that the TigerFox Pod is able to convey the important emotional experience, or the feeling that’s often missing or not able to be fully experienced in the playback of a sound recording. 

     

    As you explained in the first paragraph of your report, the Pod is able to really put you there like experiencing the indescribable sound of coyotes in the wild.

     

    2. Your assessment and important affirmation that individual sounds heard in the 2 speaker TigerFox Pod system were spatially positioned around the listener at the exact same locations as a meticulously-setup 12 speaker Atmos system! 

     

    Like you explained with Pink Floyd’s Time from the Dark Side of the Moon, even tho the recordings were different, the sounds positioned by the Pod were “uncanny” in their locational accuracy. 

     

    This is most important to communicate to the community because the Pod faithfully positions sounds around the listener as they were positioned in the recordings. If originally well positioned, they are not generalized or only a nice “effect”! 

     

    3. It is important to those considering a TigerFox Pod that you actually preferred listening to an original recording in the TigerFox Pod over listening to its new mastered version in the fully setup 12 speaker Atmos system. 

     

    As you mentioned, for example in your reference recording of Spiral, “Sitting in the Pod enhances the sound of the entire experience”. 

     

    4.  I was very happy and encouraged to read in your overall final assessment that you felt “torn inside” when having to choose between the TigerFox system and the Atmos system. 

     

    This was especially notable after spending over a year with the Pod and after comparing the two systems over time and with many different immersive recordings. 

     

    This is also valued information when considering the significant differences in size, setup, numbers of components, and the sheer cost disparity between the 2 immersive systems!

     

    5. It was also noted that you explained very well in your report something rarely mentioned in audio reviews - that the Pod breaks the audiophile cost-benefit principle. That is, $6,000 speakers and $20,000 worth of electronics are not needed to achieve the high-end immersive improvements that the Immerse 360 provides. 

     

    This is because: (a.) by removing the massive sound corrupting effects of the room, (b.) by repairing speaker crosstalk, and (c.) by precision time-aligning the speakers’s direct sound with the large quantity of otherwise lost indirect sound, even $150 speakers, other low cost electronics, and simple streamed music can be upgraded by the Pod to achieve ultra-high-performance music playback results.

     

    However, even after intuitively understanding the new audio synergism that results when the Pod effectively removes these prior sound reproduction problems and limitations, the Pod is not believable! 

     

    As bobfa will testify, this totally new audio physics-based technology only becomes believable when it’s been personally experienced.

     

    Thank you, again, bobfa. 

     

    Audiophiles can look forward to your leading the way in explaining to the community the subtle details of high performance immersive audio which are finally here for music lovers to fully enjoy, both in its complex electronic forms and now in its complex acoustical physics form with the TigerFox Immerse 360.

     

    Hats off to you!

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    On 7/26/2023 at 9:31 AM, Archimago said:

     

    @ROPolka

    As per discussions, this device is a "room within a room" product that introduces boundaries for the purpose of creating reflections all around the listener. As such, do you have any measurements you can show of the change in frequency response with and without the Tigerfox360 in a typical room you're testing this in? This might help the consumer understand the accentuations in frequency response we might see for speaker selection.

     

     

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    Answering your request for some typical room measurements with vs. without the TigerFox360 Pod, here is a copy of a page from one of our issued patents.

     

    It shows dB measurements around the room both without (Figure A - the Control) and with various sized Pods (Figures B, C, & D) where the sound is coming from the same two speakers in the same location (1aL and 1aR) in all figures.

     

    Measurements were taken at the same locations in the room.  For reference, a dB of 6 is considered either a doubling or halving of the sound volume.

     

    if you look behind the listener's location (behind 19A) on this page (outside of the Pod) at the underlined dB measurements in Figures A and B, you will see the dB difference between a given location in the room without the Pod (67 dB is seen in Figure A (the Control) vs. the dB at the same location with the soundboard wall in place (58 dB as seen in Figure B). This is a drop of 9dB at the same place in the room with vs. without the soundboard wall in place. 

     

    Looking at other locations in the room in Figure A vs Figure B, you'll see other dB measurements in the room with vs. without the TigerFox pod in place.

    Fig. H dB tests 026.tiff

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    Added Note: These measurements were taken in a typical room with vs. without the TigerFox Immerse 360's soundboard wall in place in dB which shows the total sound from the speakers (1aL and 1aR) and not broken down into the individual frequencies as you originally requested. Even tho the frequencies are not individually shown, hopefully this information will help you with your question.

     

    Let me know any further questions in this regard!

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    On 7/20/2023 at 9:27 PM, STC said:

    .the brain is good at recreating the sound scene in the head based on what’s previously heard.

     

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    18 minutes ago, ROPolka said:

    Answering your request for some typical room measurements with vs. without the TigerFox360 Pod, here is a copy of a page from one of our issued patents.

     

    It shows dB measurements around the room both without (Figure A - the Control) and with various sized Pods (Figures B, C, & D) where the sound is coming from the same two speakers in the same location (1aL and 1aR) in all figures.

     

    Measurements were taken at the same locations in the room.  For reference, a dB of 6 is considered either a doubling or halving of the sound volume.

     

    if you look behind the listener's location (behind 19A) on this page (outside of the Pod) at the underlined dB measurements in Figures A and B, you will see the dB difference between a given location in the room without the Pod (67 dB is seen in Figure A (the Control) vs. the dB at the same location with the soundboard wall in place (58 dB as seen in Figure B). This is a drop of 9dB at the same place in the room with vs. without the soundboard wall in place. 

     

    Looking at other locations in the room in Figure A vs Figure B, you'll see other dB measurements in the room with vs. without the TigerFox pod in place.

    Fig. H dB tests 026.tiff 24.23 MB · 0 downloads

    I believe he asked for frequency response information, and you provided decible information. Do you have any frequency response measurements? Do you have anything close to industry standard measurements?

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    Just a note about our human ability to remember sound. 

     

    That's an interesting thought.

     

    I have not had the same experience of people being able to remember the sound even for a very short time.

     

    For example, when doing comparative A/B tests using the same content and keeping everything in the system the same but just changing one component to evaluate it's + or - affect, most people I've noted have a very difficult time comparatively remembering the sound between just 2 close together tests of the same content to the point where we need to keep the listening length down to about 15 seconds.

     

    It seems any longer than that (even using the same content) and doubt creeps into their ability to remember A vs. B.

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    20 minutes ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    I believe he asked for frequency response information, and you provided decible information. Do you have any frequency response measurements? Do you have anything close to industry standard measurements?

    Even tho individual frequencies are not done for these decibel room measurements, hopefully this information will help others understand how sound from the speakers is generally attenuated at many different locations around a typical room by the Immerse 360 for nearby non listeners as requested earlier for a possible home office use

     

    These general dB measurements, as thought in another post, would attenuate mostly the higher frequencies of the audio content being played.  

     

    Note too that bothersome non-listener sound depends both on the volume of the sound from the speakers and by the content being played in the Pod (natural rain sounds and background forest sounds are usually not bothersome to those nearby while being greatly enhanced at the listener location by the Pod) 

    Furthermore, because the Pod is made for near field playback (your speakers are only about 36" from your ears) and because the sound volume from the speakers is greatly reduced within the Pod enclosure, low volume would be heard by those nearby while "normal" listening volume can be enjoyed by those in the Pod's sweet spot. 

    (It's interesting to take a close look at the dB comparisons at the listener location (19a) inside the Pod vs at different locations around a typical room in Figure H, resubmitted here for reference)

    Fig. H dB tests 026.pdf

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    People remember that low frequencies, say 250 Hz down, are omni-directional. As the frequencies go up, they tend to beam more. This is why I said previously, that it is the higher frequencies that give positional information. This all gets mucked up with bad speaker positioning and/or room acoustics.

     

    Rick, maybe you should explain your background, so they know this is based on physics and how we perceive sound.

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    On 7/20/2023 at 9:27 PM, STC said:

    Whether the sound of TF360 is similar to ATMOS playback can easily be proven with a $100 binaural mics.

    Good news! 

     

    The average person doesn't need special binaural mics or complex measuring devices to reliably determine whether a soundtrack's sounds are heard in the same physical locations around the listener in the TigerFox Pod as with an ATMOS playback of the same soundtrack.

     

    This is easily and quickly determined. 

     

    One's ears alone can easily hear the exact locations of individual sounds positioned around the listener both in a special ATMOS playback version of a soundtrack and using the original version of the same soundtrack in the TigerFox Pod.

     

    Also, those sound locations around the listener are immediately obvious in the TigerFox Pod.  Their locations are not subtle. One simply needs to test this for themselves.

     

    This, of course, assumes that one has normal, balanced hearing. And assumes that ATMOS had positioned the sounds in their special playback version in the same location as in the original stereo version.

     

    Positioning observation: After listening to more than 50 such dual recordings (ATMOS & stereo versions of the same soundtrack) streamed with Tidal using various playback devices and in the TigerFox Pod with an assortment of speakers, I have not personally heard individual sounds positioned in noticeably different locations between the ATMOS and the original stereo version of the same soundtracks.

     

    Does this help answer your question?

     

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    I think what the gent was asking was, does the tigerfox reflect all frequencies equally? That could easily be done with an cellphone, a frequency sweep generator, a calibrated mic, and a dB meter app for the phone. Setup the system, put the mic stand where a person would sit, height of ears when sitting and then play the frequency sweep generator through the audio system.

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    5 minutes ago, botrytis said:

    I think what the gent was asking was, does the tigerfox reflect all frequencies equally? That could easily be done with an cellphone, a frequency sweep generator, a calibrated mic, and a dB meter app for the phone. Setup the system, put the mic stand where a person would sit, height of ears when sitting and then play the frequency sweep generator through the audio system.

    Rick is deliberately avoiding the measurement discussions. 

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    I don't believe he is, Chris. I can say this after meeting Rick. This is not his only job, so that is part of it.

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    6 hours ago, ROPolka said:

    Just a note about our human ability to remember sound. 

     

    That's an interesting thought.

     

    I have not had the same experience of people being able to remember the sound even for a very short time.


     

    3 hours ago, ROPolka said:

    The average person doesn't need special binaural mics or complex measuring devices to reliably determine whether a soundtrack's sounds are heard in the same physical locations around the listener in the TigerFox Pod as with an ATMOS playback of the same soundtrack.


    You just contradicted yourself. 
     

    Echoic memory lasts just few seconds. But sound scene is reconstructed based on prior knowledge. Just place your phone on the other side of the place you usually put and you will notice that when the phone rings you would naturally hear as if it is coming from the side where you usually put them. Once you realized it’s not there then the localization cues are used to find the phone. 

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    6 minutes ago, botrytis said:

    Rick, maybe you should explain your background, so they know this is based on physics and how we perceive sound.

    The product should be the background

    My background I usually don't share because I feel that the product alone should speak for itself and take on its own spotlight. I think most agree that audio performance is were the "rubber meets the road".

     

    Fortunately, the technology built into the physics-based TigerFox® Immerse 360® system (that I've managed to perfect after 624 versions) finally does a very good job on its own, with little else needed.

     

    My prior audio background

    As for myself, I've been a compulsive perfectionist my whole life (my father showed me the importance of a micrometer at the age of 5). And, I've been an audiophile-in-learning for over 40 years. (I have books and piles of Stereophile and TAS magazines that I read cover-to-cover on the subject.)


    Along with years of studying audio from every angle, I've been able to visit countless high-end (and some low end) audio stores from coast to coast over the years, often going back again and again to comparatively hear and test different electronics against each other as much as they would allow me to. 

     

    With this, I've learned that setup precision is very important, that it makes a predicable difference in audio playback. And I've learned to understand that seemingly small things, the physics, makes a huge difference in the results.

     

    What I didn't have along the way, however, was an unlimited budget to be able to purchase the really "good stuff".  Nor did I have the needed space in our home to put it. This provided the need and the basis for discovering the physics behind the Immerse 360.

     

    My prior work background

    Some things in my life that helped with the physics were 10 years of university studies that gave me an open mind, my original work at Oldsmobile plastics lab which allowed me to develop on my own a new high-performance automotive top coating, my 45 year background in ultraviolet photonics (the study and performance of light) including the development of several industrial-grade UV reflector products, my 50 years of product development and self-employment giving me the self-confidence and openness to think for myself, engineer, develop and manufacture new products on my own in industries that are very diverse. 

     

    The physics behind the Immerse 360

    Along with this background, what really got me going tho and what put this product together was the Devine inspiration of using what is called the golden geometric triangle. The golden geometric triangle has been broadly utilized since ancient times in physics, art and architecture. And it is also used in the audiophile industry for the precise positioning of two stereo speakers and one listener .

     

    The Golden Spiral

    In the development of the Immerse 360, however, the golden triangle is used at the center of, and along with, what is referred to as the golden spiral. If you googled it or the golden ratio, it would show you the exact soundboard shape, and it reveals the physics used behind the product.

     

    If you can envision it, how the physics of the Immerse 360 works is - the outer spiral shape was doubled, one side flipped, and both sides fused together, along with the golden triangle intricately positioned inside of the combined shape.

     

    The rest was years of work, trial and error, A/B testing, and ultimately perfection!

     

    The result

    The result is an amazing harmonious relationship between all the important components in stereo sound reproduction!

    (It's been called "audio magic" by many who have experienced immersive stereo recordings played back at the sweet spot inside of the Immerse 360)

     

    The musical instrument soundboard (not mentioned here)

    Let me know if you would like me to discuss what the ancient musical instrument soundboard has to do with the development of the Immerse 360.

     

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