I don't really understand why everyone hates centerpoint so much?
This is the problem I have with it, the echoey sound. I haven't tried it with HD radio since I listen to my iPod or bluetooth 100% of the time, but I had to turn it off, it was driving me nuts.For me it just made the audio sound monaural, and maybe even a bit "echoey", as if a reverb was added.
Exactly! Bose "premium" surround sound system in CX-5 with mostly cheap paper-cone mid-range speakers is a home theater system good for movie watching, not good for music listening!For me it just made the audio sound monaural, and maybe even a bit "echoey", as if a reverb was added. I enjoy a strong center channel speaker in my surround sound at home for watching movies, not so much for music.
Totally agree! Cheaper 7-speaker Bose system on Mazda CX-3 with dash tweeters and spare-tire sub-woofer has better sound quality than 9-mid-range-speaker Bose "surround sound" system on CX-5! Bose said Mazda ignored their recommendation and eliminated two dash tweeters in CX-5 to save some penneys - penny wise and pound foolish!It's sad, but the sound system in the smaller (and too low to the ground for me) has a much better sounding system. Maybe I'm just getting too old, but I cannot see spending 30k for a new vehicle and then having to replace speakers, amps or the unit itself. I went through that in the mid-60s with my '66 Le Mans, my wife'66 GTO, my '75 TR6, my '77 Gran Prix, even my '77 K5 Blazer (bi-amp tuner and cassette player). I just don't see any reason for doing it in a 2016 vehicle that costs 10 times what my '66 Le Man's did.
Garbage in , garbage out. The system sounds good with a good source. I use high bit rate AAC files or CD's much of the time. XM sounds OK. Radio, not so much. Bluetooth, about the same.Yep, I called Bose myself and they ragged on their own system, too. Told me it's designed to play an "original" store bought CD.They stated that the radio and Bluetooth will sound "tinny" and empty. What a shame for an otherwise great auto. It's driving me crazy.
Yes, garbage in, garbage out. Good old vinyl record and CD's have the best sound quality. But speakers are the most important component in a good audio system! There's no way an audio system with poor quality speakers can produce good quality music even with high quality sound source. Mazda eliminated dash tweeters on CX-5 and sacrificed very important high notes for music. With 9 mostly mid-range, cheap paper-cone speakers simply is NOT a high fidelity audio system for music listening.Garbage in , garbage out. The system sounds good with a good source. I use high bit rate AAC files or CD's much of the time. XM sounds OK. Radio, not so much. Bluetooth, about the same.
Its actually not the sound signature that bothers me (sound graph). Its a V-shaped sound similar to my Sennheiser headphones which have premium magnets/materials and German tuning. The problem as stated before are the paper cone materials and the smallish magnets. You literally can get improved sound by simply replacing the Bose speakers with $10 speakers (that have bigger magnets and materials) let alone those costing $50 or more so long as the ohms are in range.
Imho, simply swapping the tweeters, upgrading the rear door mids, adding a sub with mono amp would satisfy 95% of consumers out there.
Exactly! Bose "premium" surround sound system in CX-5 with mostly cheap paper-cone mid-range speakers is a home theater system good for movie watching, not good for music listening!