I have a relatively new NW S705 that I got from ebay after the Woot.com blowout pricing. I fiddled with many of the options and did not find that they had much impact, but the dynamic normalizer does. I listen mostly to classical music and Sony's 5 mw output is often a little low for music with a wide dynamic range unless the headphones are really efficient. I had a pair of headphones that I used and liked a lot with my Sharp 722 minidisc, but most of my Sony units have to be close to or at max volume to drive them. So I have used them sparingly with my Sony HD5. The S705 was a little louder that the HD5 but still getting near the max with those phones until I chose the dynamic normalizer. Now I can use my less efficient, but nice sounding headphones with the S705 at medium volume levels. The sound is excellent. Does anyone know exactly what the normalizer does? I'm guessing the volume of the digital signal is being altered before the D/A conversion. Without the normalizer on, the volume is nowhere near as loud even at max volume. The music still seems to have a normal dynamic range. Is this something like scale factor edit on the old minidisc decks only in real time?
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Terence Kelly
I have a relatively new NW S705 that I got from ebay after the Woot.com blowout pricing. I fiddled with many of the options and did not find that they had much impact, but the dynamic normalizer does. I listen mostly to classical music and Sony's 5 mw output is often a little low for music with a wide dynamic range unless the headphones are really efficient. I had a pair of headphones that I used and liked a lot with my Sharp 722 minidisc, but most of my Sony units have to be close to or at max volume to drive them. So I have used them sparingly with my Sony HD5. The S705 was a little louder that the HD5 but still getting near the max with those phones until I chose the dynamic normalizer. Now I can use my less efficient, but nice sounding headphones with the S705 at medium volume levels. The sound is excellent. Does anyone know exactly what the normalizer does? I'm guessing the volume of the digital signal is being altered before the D/A conversion. Without the normalizer on, the volume is nowhere near as loud even at max volume. The music still seems to have a normal dynamic range. Is this something like scale factor edit on the old minidisc decks only in real time?
TK
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