![]() The style of the TV is paramount, and the engineers in charge of the audio are forced to work within the constraints of the styling team (with few, if any, modifications. With enough processing and amplifier power, fairly small drivers can produce surprisingly decent sound. To produce very high sounds, the driver should ideally be fairly small. To produce deep bass sounds, the driver either has to be very large, or have lots of power behind it. The sound you hear is compressions and rarefactions in the air (the soundwaves), produced by a small moving object called a driver. Ask yourself this: have you ever had to turn the volume way up to hear a line of dialog? Ever had miss entire sections of plot because there was so much going on on-screen that the jumbled mess was unintelligible? These are prime examples of bad audio. ![]() You’re painfully aware of how bad your TV sounds. The same thinness that drove you to buy that shiny TV, also contributes to its lackluster sound. ![]() While all sorts of magic is possible to squeeze two million pixels into something barely thicker than a pencil, sound goes by a different set of rules. Here’s the thing, despite over a decade of flat panel TV development, TV sound is as bad now as it’s ever been. Hard to enjoy (“enjoy”?) American Idol without sound, and Transformers V: Transformerer is an incomprehensible mess without visuals. There are two equally important aspects to all televisions: the video, and the sound. ![]()
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