BigStrings
Well-known member
May have already been covered but I didn't see it. Just wondering if the Sterling HH is comparable to the Bongo HH as far as tone and bottom end. Is the Sterling 18 volt as well?
Figjam said:Just from instinct id say that the Sterling most likely will be a little more hi fi sounding.
Figjam said:TO me its really modern.. more trebely? Idk its just a feeling i get rather than descirbing it well.
Figjam said:TO me its really modern.. more trebely? Idk its just a feeling i get rather than descirbing it well.
That "hi-fi" term gets kicked around. Seems to mean a degree of brilliance is 'dialed in' to the default [flat] tone. Yeah I agree it makes no sense if "hi-fi" means "high level of fidelity to an input source" [which is what 'hi-fi' is supposed to mean].strummer said:How would you describe a bass that is "hi fi" sounding? I have never understood that. In audio equipment, sure, but basses?
Bill said:My idea of hi-fi is my 15-year-old stereo being run through computer speakers.![]()
It's really not about electronics, just words:Figjam said:And im just a monkey who knows nothing about home systems ...who is also just the bass player
Good point. We must be *faithful* to the topicFigjam said:..teheheh *giggles*
look how much discussion has erupted from my choice of vocabulary.
Hopefully i didnt derail the thread from the topic at hand.
Golem said:It's really not about electronics, just words:
Semper Fidelis [US Marines]
Infidelitity [divorce court, breech of marital fidelity]
Fido [faithful dog]
High Fidelity [very faithful to the original]
Etc [etc]
So, if fidelity is faithfulness and high fidelity is even greater faithfulness, then "hi-fi" is being applied in a meaningless way when it describes some degree of tone coloration, like extra brilliance, brightness, modern-ness, etc, which leads to replies asking what is meant by that term.