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Anthem Statement D2 Pre/Pro:
ARC’s correction process also calibrates channel levels, corrects phase to avoid cancellations
Think About the Future
But this was before the ARC landed. I must admit this was essentially my first foray into auto setup and room EQ. I’ve been a separates guy for years, and this technology has mostly been employed in AVRs until recently. ARC overcame my preconceptions here. It was relatively subtle in overall impact and sounded more natural than many EQ systems I’ve heard in audio-only systems. It can’t hurt that movie soundtracks themselves are so “manufactured” for the most part. The biggest difference was in the bass. It sounded tighter and punchier to me and seemed to dig deeper in extension. With the ARC cleaning up the bass—and some other nips and tucks in EQ—I clearly heard a little more sparkle and detail. And the sound felt less confined to the listening room itself, let alone the speaker positions. The best piece of demo software I’ve come across in years is Cloverfield on Blu-ray. I thought my room was literally coming down with the rest of New York. The bass impact and dynamics felt crushing. I A/B’d some of its critical scenes with ARC on and off. This revealed that, with the ARC off, the bass was looser and not as well defined. The Large Scale Aggressor lost some of its oomph with ARC defeated. Jumper might not be A-list cinema, but the soundtrack rocks. A jolt of bass accompanies each “jump,” and it sounded much more present and visceral with ARC engaged. The Blu-ray edition of Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World also emphatically drives home the improved spatiality. Master’s battle sequences put you right on that ship, and man, it’s downright scary. Belowdecks, you can hear your shipmates walking around topside. And when you’re up in the ocean air, the wind and sails and creaks and groans from the ship are everywhere. Lossless audio on Blu-ray is ushering in a golden age in surround sound quality. The D2 reveals these nuances with extraordinary clarity and heightens the sense of involvement dramatically.
Conclusion
Highlights
Article Continues: At A Glance »
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at low frequencies, and sets the crossovers. Its test signals are wider in range than those you’ll find on most test discs or built into AVRs and pre/pros. When I used Anthem’s supplied microphone, the results were strikingly accurate. The D2 allows sophisticated crossover choices for each channel. I own and use a RadioShack SPL meter and have never trusted a component to make these choices. The ARC made me look like an ass. Its assessment of channel levels was on the money. And I’m willing to give it credit for the times when its choices differed from mine in the crossover settings. As you’ll read, the system sounded better.
Performance