ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
I heard about the ambio mode that was present on many old B&O receivers recently, and I’ve since admittedly become slightly obsessed with the idea. So much so that I’ve considered investing in an old Ambiophonic Stereo Adapter. I’m just wondering if anyone here can attest to what it actually sounds like? I’ve always been perfectly happy with standard stereo, and never taken an interest in source devices which support surround, so this concept seems like a perfect in between to me. Hoping someone here can shed some light on the subject.
-Joshua
I permanently use an Ambio box with my Beomaster 8000. I chose S45 speakers for that function.
It does bring a sense of atmosphere.
It’s fake but quite pleasant.
Jacques
Ambiophonic is the same thing as what was called Hafler Dynaquad. I made one of these boxes about 40 years ago and also found an old Dynaco box later I played with. What this does is take connect the positive speaker level signals, Right + and Left + to a pair of rear speakers (usually attenuated some), which are then outputting the difference between the two channels, L - R. The original Dolby Surround was this for the rear channels with a 20 millisecond delay applied, which then evolved to this plus a L+R as a center channel.
As Cleviebaby points out, it generally works best with simple recordings, two mics, in a place that has real reverb and acoustic space, like a concert hall recording as opposed to a studio album or multi-mic'd recording, but it depends a lot on the recording. I've heard some pop/rock tracks that use a lot of phase manipulation produce interesting effects
Worth experimenting with to see if you like it, it's inexpensive and fun. I didn't wind up using it much at the time.
Jeff
I'm afraid I'm recovering from the BeoVirus.
Sounds fun- not so much inexpensive. Is there a cheaper solution than buying the official B&O adapter?
I dont have any kind of adapter. Just two old Philips SQ5060 speakers connected together via - tabs and from + tabs to Rl+ and Lf+ on amp side.
Edit: Correction, I do have B&O adapter, but not in use because I too lazy to adapt my wiring to fit it :D
blah-blah and photographs as needed
Is there any way you could send a diagram or some other visual aid? I’m somehow too stupid to decode what you mean here, ahah
Orava:
Thanks so much! Just to be clear, if I wanted my ambio speakers to be wired to my speaker B terminals (so as to make the whole system toggleable) would I have to short the 2 negative terminals?
Only + from amp, speakers negative connected together