...is what you get out.
I've been on a little adventure into how to get an improvement out of the HK system in my car, without ripping out all the speakers and starting again, and as the title says what you put in helps in what you get out.
We are already at a disadvantage, we own a two seater sports car with a fabric convertible roof, that has numerous things on the inside that reflect sound, a sound studio it is not. Combined with that it's not the quietest place to listen to music, road and tyre noise are quite intrusive. So at low volume levels, all the mids are lost in the noise of the road.
So what can you do, well, part of the problem is not the Harmon Kardon system itself, it's rather what you put in, that's not helping it perform. For start, there is no wired CarPlay, so it is all Wifi or bluetooth connection only. If you have an iPhone, regardless of what bitrate your recording is, Apple converts it internally to AAC lossy @ 256 kbps, while AAC is better than MP3, it is not CD quality (16 bit/44 kHz or 1,4401 kbps for stereo) If you have an Android phone, it can be slightly better, but it's not going to be significantly better and still not CD Quality. It is also worth noting that, AirPlay 2, your iPhone converts it down to AAC lossy also, the only way to get lossless music out of your iPhone is with a wired connection.
How to make it better, quite a few months ago I treated my self to an ARCAM +A25 amp and A5 streamer and thus joined Qobuz, going with their sublime subscription to fully enjoy the new system. I am now re-purchasing my favourite albums when they are available in Hi-res format and the first two albums I purchased were Dark Side of the Moon and Hotel California, 24 bit/96 kHz and 24 bit/192 kHz respectively. I downloaded them into a format that iDrive 7 can read as FLAC files, fully lossless and compressed onto a flash drive and popped that into the usb port near the charger. And yes there is a difference, low volume is better, but it is at the higher levels that the it is much clearer, and more detailed, yes of course it is subjective, but I played Hotel California back to back, one by iTunes through CarPlay and the other directly from USB and there is a difference. However, don't get to excited, the HK system, will downsample this media to 16 bit/ 48kHz so for the car, you don't need or want Hi-res audio, but again CD quality is better than AAC.
So now the journey continues, I'm ripping my entire CD collection using Exact Audio Copy to FLAC, compressed but no loss of resolution. Getting them into a correct format for iDrive 7 with MusicBrainz Picard whilst embedding artwork into the track, and then using Music Bee to organise creating playlists, syncing them onto a usb flash drive and it all works perfectly. Yes it sounds daunting and it has taken a fair few weeks to get it right, but ChatGPT really has helped in the process.
I bought a 128 GB flash drive, I don't this its going to be big enough
I've been on a little adventure into how to get an improvement out of the HK system in my car, without ripping out all the speakers and starting again, and as the title says what you put in helps in what you get out.
We are already at a disadvantage, we own a two seater sports car with a fabric convertible roof, that has numerous things on the inside that reflect sound, a sound studio it is not. Combined with that it's not the quietest place to listen to music, road and tyre noise are quite intrusive. So at low volume levels, all the mids are lost in the noise of the road.
So what can you do, well, part of the problem is not the Harmon Kardon system itself, it's rather what you put in, that's not helping it perform. For start, there is no wired CarPlay, so it is all Wifi or bluetooth connection only. If you have an iPhone, regardless of what bitrate your recording is, Apple converts it internally to AAC lossy @ 256 kbps, while AAC is better than MP3, it is not CD quality (16 bit/44 kHz or 1,4401 kbps for stereo) If you have an Android phone, it can be slightly better, but it's not going to be significantly better and still not CD Quality. It is also worth noting that, AirPlay 2, your iPhone converts it down to AAC lossy also, the only way to get lossless music out of your iPhone is with a wired connection.
How to make it better, quite a few months ago I treated my self to an ARCAM +A25 amp and A5 streamer and thus joined Qobuz, going with their sublime subscription to fully enjoy the new system. I am now re-purchasing my favourite albums when they are available in Hi-res format and the first two albums I purchased were Dark Side of the Moon and Hotel California, 24 bit/96 kHz and 24 bit/192 kHz respectively. I downloaded them into a format that iDrive 7 can read as FLAC files, fully lossless and compressed onto a flash drive and popped that into the usb port near the charger. And yes there is a difference, low volume is better, but it is at the higher levels that the it is much clearer, and more detailed, yes of course it is subjective, but I played Hotel California back to back, one by iTunes through CarPlay and the other directly from USB and there is a difference. However, don't get to excited, the HK system, will downsample this media to 16 bit/ 48kHz so for the car, you don't need or want Hi-res audio, but again CD quality is better than AAC.
So now the journey continues, I'm ripping my entire CD collection using Exact Audio Copy to FLAC, compressed but no loss of resolution. Getting them into a correct format for iDrive 7 with MusicBrainz Picard whilst embedding artwork into the track, and then using Music Bee to organise creating playlists, syncing them onto a usb flash drive and it all works perfectly. Yes it sounds daunting and it has taken a fair few weeks to get it right, but ChatGPT really has helped in the process.
I bought a 128 GB flash drive, I don't this its going to be big enough

