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Posted by Romy the Cat on 07-02-2011
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Here I would like to have a thread dedicated to a hypothetical ultimate MF compression driver. Use the existing, know to you compression drives as references.  Any thoughts?

The Cat

Posted by Paul S on 07-02-2011
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Here's something from a guy perhaps better known for his direct radiators:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Atelier-Rullit-RH-T903-field-coil-drivers-/330581513356?pt=Vintage_Electronics_R2&hash=item4cf831948c

Best regards,
Paul

Posted by Romy the Cat on 07-02-2011
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Yes, Rulit does try to push envelop of something. He does exiting projects but I do not know how all of it manifests itself in actual results. I said that he  pushes the “envelop of something” as I do not know what this “something” is.  I never heard anything he does. 10 years back what I was traveling in Germany I was planning to visit him, we contacted him; preliminary agreed to meet but when I was there it slipped off my plans (cherchez la femme), so we never met and I never heard anything he does.

When I was talking about ultimate driver I did not really was looking for a brand and model but rather to create a retrial requirement for a hypothetic ultimate driver. Let me to copy what Rulit says as the eBay article will be gone soon:

“For sale are two Atelier Rullit RH-T903 field coil drivers. This pair is actually a result of my research on compression drivers. I have tried out every material I could think of, be it different species of aluminium or phenolic and cellophane for manufacturing diaphragms, but each turned out to be sounding somewhat uncouth, crude and aggressive, in other words PA (public address), and didn't have anything to do with home use. The up-to-date Rullit drivers are equipped with diaphragms from cellulose. They're playing bloody awesome - delicate and with a sensation of "just alike live". The chef's suggestion for music gourmets ... fits absolutely fine in two-way combinations like Klangfilm Eurodyn, Western Electric, etc. Résumé: Apart from rare exceptions, all PA drivers, including the ancient ones, have been developed for other purposes than subtle music reproduction and thus are hardly appropriate for home use. The cellulose diaphragms showed the way to another world, another dimension ...”

For sure the use of cellophane cone is a novelty but my primary concern in this thread is not what people do but what they are trying to accomplish. Among his objective Rulit named that he was searching ways to escape crude and aggressive sound from PA-minded compression drivers. For sure it is a noble task but there are plenty drivers that do not sound crude and aggressive but instead they sound soft and syrupy. So, based upon his description I do not know what he was trying to accomplish. Generally I do not like the “small” 802-size diaphragms like Rulit use. They are a bit too upper HF and do not do well at lower MF. The cellophane diaphragm might behave differently, I just do not know. Still, Rulit does have tendency for use wide bandwidth drivers with minimal amount of channels. This is not the direction that I like and Eurodyn or Western Electric would not help being brought as reference.

Anyhow, if use the Rullit’s input in ultimate compression driver subject then it would be “no crude and aggressive sound.” I am certainly on the same page with him.  However, all of the drivers that I ever seen and heard had the very same characteristics – if they did not sound aggressive then they were not able to show off aggressiveness when music does call aggressive and brutality.  This ability to show off the viciousness and violence if necessary is one of the many characteristics for which I like so much my Vitavox S2 driver. S2 is very much along with Rulit classification of PA drivers and S2 is crude and aggressive. However, if it used properly and sensibly then S2 is very much not aggressive, in fact it is as soft and malleable as baby kitten but if it was called upon to throw aggressive vigor then it has “it” with itself.   BTW, partially it is what my 6E5P amps do.

So, one of my requirement  for an ultimate compression driver would be NOT abolition of crudeness and aggressiveness but rather to ability of a driver to play soft and elastic when necessary and to play hard and bold when music is called upon it.

Rgs, Romy the Cat

Posted by Paul S on 07-03-2011
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Yes, the tamed beast is an oxi-moron.  I thought of my 808s as ragged, rough (grainy) and spitty, while the S2 was also ragged/uneven, but the roughness was more like the sound of a metal zipper.  Anyway, I never heard either of these stock drivers make nice with complex music.  Doping and bedding the surrounds "helped" the 808s some, but it also homogenized the remaining sound.  Of course, I would approach all this differently now...

Back to the driver I just tossed in the ring, to see the wide variety of R's drivers, it appears that he accepts some self-sound as long as it is his idea of natural and musical, like an instrument, and from his own descriptions I gather he leans +/- toward high-end vintage sound, or he perceives that as his audience/market.

As for the cellulose (paper) itself, I am not at all sure that what works/happens in a direct radiator works/happens as well in a compression driver, and particularly in the case of the "variegated" homemade paper I have seen used for his direct radiators.  I guess any such problems would happen by degrees, and I suppose it is possible that someone might actually develop "suitable" paper after years of effing with it.  On the one hand, it seems like a reach; on the other hand, why even finish it, let alone sell it, unless it does some things very well?  After all, it's not his first trip around the block.

I think O.R. may fish for links, to check them out and sometimes respond, and now there is an attractive "header", so, maybe we'll be set straight on this.

Best regards
Paul

Posted by Jorge on 07-03-2011
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This is something I have been at for the last few years, I have tried a few drivers, at the moment some of my favorite are the vintage RCA MI 1443,  yes filed coil and some funny cone diaphragm,  they are used from 500 hz to 5 khz with a Fostex T500 tweeter on top, they do have the non crude or agressive sound, but most of all they sound very organic, they are able to resolve highly complicated music, but they do have that non agressive sound... when called for they cannot go and tear your ears apart or blow them away!  And there are times in the music this needs to be done.

My reference at the moment are the Beyma 755. I use them cut from 650 hz up to around 9khz, they can go really high but if you allow this then they start to get fuzzy,  I low pass them with a very small coil just enough to get the fuzziness out and let them do their best.  They are titanium diaphragms but with a plastic suspension (mylar). I have used and tried for some time a very few drivers that gave me what I wanted,  18sound 2060A with aluminum diphragm and plastic suspension, 18sound 1480 with titanium phrams and plastic suspension. Actually the 1480 and the Beyma 755 sound pretty alike. Now the 18sound 2060 and the 1480 are almost the same driver, 1.4 inch throat and 3 inch phram.  The main two differences are the phram material which in the 2060 (or 1460 with extension) is aluminum, the 1480 is titanium and Magnetic flux which is 1.9 tesla for the 2060 and 2.2 tesla for the 1480. 
So Mainly two very much the same drivers but one has higher magnetic flux and titanium vs aluminum diaphragms both with plastic suspension.
Soundwise both are very good drivers, but the 1480 is much better.  the most dramatic change between them is the weight of the instruments,  the 1480 has much more impact and the instruments seem to have more weight to them, they are more easily identifiable with better definition and separation between instruments.  This means that with complicated music, I can think right now of the Russian Easter Overture the 2060 plays it with no flaws, but the 1480 puts more shine on the trumpets and better weight on the instruments meaning also more separation and transparency, not very noticeable with simpler music, but when the crescendo gets here, you will want the 1480.  Now the beyma 755 has all the same attributes than the 1480, titanium diaphragm plastic suspension with 2.2 tesla, no wonder they sound very similar, as resolving and with the same weight on the instruments I have come to love,  but the tone of the Beyma is a little bit more organic, instruments are little more credible, you believe they are instruments a bit more than with the 1480,  and that is important.
18sound has since come out with a new diaphragm in the NSD1480 that is titanium nitride coated,  whatever that means it is supposed to have 6 times more stifness than normal titanium and twice as much a berylium, I call it the Viagra driver,  but I havent been able to get a pair for testing yet... and my urge to test drivers is decreasing.
Of course I started out with a pair of Altec 802 which were surpassed easily by Beyma 380 with plastic phram, I latter hated both. I tried JBL 375 bubblebacks and did not really care for them,  they were nice on piano, but wouldnt go high enough to make a credible violin and couldnt solve a good as the 2060.  I got Radian 950 which I thought at the moment would be a more modern version of the 375 with plastic suspension on the diaphragm and neo magnets, but I found that one shouty,  I went to a lot of trouble to tame it, and in the process getting some of it good attributes out of the way.  Bruce Edgar says there are drivers that work better on different horns,  I guess they didnt like round tactrix MDF horns.
I dont know if the case is the same for the TAD 2001 drivers. on my tactrix horns they just didnt sound right. I tried them in 2 different horns made for them, and the results were always the same.  They have very good soundstage,  I guess it was becasue I let them go almost up to 20khz, or whatever they could go up to, I didnt low pass them at the begining.  For simpler music you will have trouble finding a nicer driver,  female voices were very organic, foscused and with great soundstage (because the tweeter was disconnected)  They dont go all the way up, but high enough that you wont miss highs.  Of course the UHF is great to integrate music, I later added the Fostex t500 way up high. That being said there was always a whizzer sound present.  I know most people are not sensitive to say Lowther whizzers,  and they have a big popularity,  I lived and loved lowthers some years back, until one day something clicked in my head and I started listening to the whizzer sound, I didnt have the guts to cut it off, so I went back to my 802,  which killed lowthers down to 800hz.  I even asked a few friends if they could identify the whizzer sound and couldnt,  I envy them.  Now TAD 2001 exhibited the same sort of whizzer sound, but at a higher frequency, not very noticeable in the begining but with time it came to a point when I just could not bear it anymore.  Of course I could fight back with lower xover points and certain tricks, but the truth is , they are not very good drivers to beguin with, not resolving enough; I would put them next to the 2060, nice and sweet but when the crescendo comes on the Polovtsian Dances and the chorus goes in full force,  they shy out,  just cannot make what the Beyma 755 does with flying colors,  even distort on climax with 1.5 watts.
I turn my own horns out of sadwiched MDF and have made at least 10 different MF horns by now,  I try to match the driver with the exact horn size according to measurements and listening tests,  IME  horn loading makes a bigger impact than Xovers,  if you have a bigger horn and try to cut your drivers higher, they wont listen to the xover, they horn will control the cut off frequency most likely.
Right now I am playing with JBL2490 drivers and when a good low pass is added they can go real low,  I have them on 120 hz horns, have not measured them again lately but I can tell they are loosening up nicely.  I want to get some diaphragms for them with plastic suspension,  maybe that will help them go just a bit lower to blend in perfectly with my lower channel.
I am still looking to try the S2 drivers, which I heard on Romys old system and loved them, of course,  and GOTO 370,  just to see what the fuzz is all about...
At the moment I guess I can say plastic suspension is a very good thing, and high tesla, 2.2.

Jorge


Posted by Jorge on 07-03-2011
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One more thing about the JBL 375, I did play around with them enough, I aligned the diaphragms several times untill they sounded their best and were very listenable,  This was some time ago now, I didnt turn my horns then, so I tried them on the original Hartfield horns with and without the "lenses".  which mainly obscured their sound.  I took them out of the Hartfield cabinet in order to have them sound in free space.  What impressed me about them was how low they would go, I once ran them with no Xover, carefully,  and they sounded very full.  I played with a lot of Xover points etc. until I got tired of them and sold the whole thing for a lot of cash.  It seems the diaphragms got missaligned on transit because the buyer said he was having some scratchy sound on one side, I instructed him how to realign the drivers a couple of times and never heard from him again,  I guess he was succesful.
A close friend had the 2441 with the Edgar 350 horns and they sounded very good also,  but the sound wasnt as I remembered of the 375s...

Jorge

Posted by Paul S on 07-03-2011
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Jorge, not to stoop to a shopping list, but I thought I also mentioned the 375 in the post where I introduced Rullit.  Anyway, I meant to. Since there is no mention of the 375 there now, I will drop it again.  This was the driver I lusted after in my youth, just because it could (and did) make nice, and it was way more linear than the "competition"; but it was always very expensive.  There is also the similar (but not the same...) 376, and the corresponding (and also "the same") "Altec" 2440 and 2441.  Back in the day, the latter 2 tended to be found as parts of larger (much larger) commercial theater and auditorium systems, rarely separated out.  But I would think any of these drivers might make a good start for the serious nut job.  Just stay away from the stock horns, and don't even go there without a reliable source for new (???) diaphragms...

Since I am no longer a horny, all this is mostly nostalgia for me now.   I just hope that the hopeful understand that these drivers are super-sensitive to ... everything, and that in-situ tuning is not just an option but it makes all the difference in the resultant sound.

To close closer to the intent of this thread, I still wonder how many people realize the "tight rope" nature of getting acceptable, linear performance from drivers that start out like rattle snakes.  It may be that someone would be happy just to own what he thinks is "the best"; but it is something else again to actually get - and sustain - even acceptable sound from some of these drivers.  As ever, to those who cruise here looking for "recommendations", Caveat Emptor, and remember, you are your results.

Best regards,
Paul S

Posted by Romy the Cat on 07-03-2011
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 Jorge wrote:
This is something I have been at for the last few years, I have tried a few drivers, at the moment some of my favorite are the vintage RCA MI 1443,  yes filed coil and some funny cone diaphragm,  they are used from 500 hz to 5 khz with a Fostex T500 tweeter on top, they do have the non crude or agressive sound, but most of all they sound very organic, they are able to resolve highly complicated music, but they do have that non agressive sound... when called for they cannot go and tear your ears apart or blow them away!  And there are times in the music this needs to be done.

Jorge, let to be a bit rational. If a driver doe not run higher then 5khz then there is no reason or even opportunity for the driver to be crude or aggressive. You can take any the most brutal driver, cross it at 5K and you will have nice and liquid sound. I do not mean to demean your RCA driver but let do not fool ourselves methodological: you can; not attribute to one driver aggressivne and to another driver luck of it if one driver run to 5K and another to 12K. The whole aggressiveness happens at the very top end of the driver response when the quality of phase plug kicks in and when the diaphragm begins to break up. 5Khz is MF that does not even need phase plug. It shall be nothing aggressive at 5K.

The Cat
 

Posted by Romy the Cat on 07-03-2011
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 Jorge wrote:
One more thing about the JBL 375, I did play around with them enough, I aligned the diaphragms several times untill they sounded their best and were very listenable,  This was some time ago now, I didnt turn my horns then, so I tried them on the original Hartfield horns with and without the "lenses".  which mainly obscured their sound.  I took them out of the Hartfield cabinet in order to have them sound in free space.  What impressed me about them was how low they would go, I once ran them with no Xover, carefully,  and they sounded very full.  I played with a lot of Xover points etc. until I got tired of them and sold the whole thing for a lot of cash.  It seems the diaphragms got missaligned on transit because the buyer said he was having some scratchy sound on one side, I instructed him how to realign the drivers a couple of times and never heard from him again,  I guess he was succesful.
A close friend had the 2441 with the Edgar 350 horns and they sounded very good also,  but the sound wasnt as I remembered of the 375s...

I said many times that I consider the JBL 375/2440 (it is the same driver) as a referees of all compression drivers. It is not that it is the best driver but it is very stable performer and it does serve good Sound (with new contemporary diaphragms) if it is properly tunes and aligned.

The caT

Posted by Romy the Cat on 07-03-2011
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 Paul S wrote:
Jorge, not to stoop to a shopping list…

Yes, Paul you are right. I do not want to look at the existing driver and to vote which one the best. I would rather be more interested to invent a concept and formulate requirements for what I call an Ultimate Driver.

The Cat

Posted by Jorge on 07-03-2011
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It does sound like a shoping list, not my intention, I was mainly trying to address some points  3 mainly:

1- You have stated before that the 2440 or 375 is a good sarting reference,  so I wanted to keep that comparison point.  thats why I went back to it.
It is a good driver.

2- The Beyma 755 has been called "poor mans TAD",  I wanted to set the records straight,  the Beyma is a superior driver IME.

3- The main idea of the thread is to  "formulate requirements"  for an ultimate driver:  This is why I stayed so long with the Eighteen sound drivers and the Beyma,  they are very similar drivers but sonically different, I think they say a lot about how different techniques sound.  So I finish with yes, 2.2 tesla seems to be a good idea,  I guess we all know by now plastic suspension is a must, and I might add,  do not rule out titanium diaphragms if they have plastic suspension.  Maybe a 3 inch diaphragm is also a good idea,  a  4 inch diaphram might be a little too much for home environtment, the drivers I tried wiith them were a bit shouty and needed some taming,  even the 375.  Now 4 inch diaphragms might work wonderfully lower,  the 375 might be a great Fundamentals channel, and the 2490 is doing a good job under the beyma from 800 hz down to 180 hz, pushing it...

Jorge


Posted by Romy the Cat on 07-03-2011
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 Romy the Cat wrote:
Here I would like to have a thread dedicated to a hypothetical ultimate MF compression driver. Use the existing, know to you compression drives as references.  Any thoughts?

I will slowly upload, as time permits to write them, different posts on the subject of Ultimate MF Compression Driver.  They most likely will not be related and will cover different aspects of the Ultimate driver. They will be just thoughts. I know, many people who read internet forums will be disappointed as I will not name a model the they would run in BestBuy store and get to themselves. Well, the life is a bitch…

I think the first thing first we need to define a range of an Ultimate MF Compression Driver. Everything in driver design is bandwidth specific, so without defining the range of the diver it is impossible to think about any further requirements.  Sure, the Ultimate MF Compression Driver shall be used in Ultimate playback inhalation. So, the question is where you would like your Ultimate MF Compression Driver operate, what shall be top and bottom cut off for the driver? Feel free not only express your desirable numbers but also to expose your reasons to justify your proposal.

The Cat

Posted by Paul S on 07-04-2011
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OK, I like this game.  Why not dream of a very wide range driver, say, from 300 - 12 or 13k?  Maybe a bit larger diaphragm and less "compression", along with a faster horn, could do the trick?  Some sort of ??? for the beaming.  Shoot for 6 dB  X/O "lapping" curves above and below.  Because of the way LF works, we are probably still talking 5-way.  The idea is to have plenty of viable "production" from this driver well above and below its "main" output, in hopes of salvaging some tone, not to mention the "continuity".

As for "Teslas in the gap", this is not a case where more is better, but it relates to the whole.  Likewise (and actually related...), there is such a thing as "critical damping", of the diaphragm itself, the surround, and also the inside (and even the outside) of the housing.  The bitch is that all these things are variables until the whole becomes clear.  It's like trying to herd cats...

Best regards,
Paul S

Posted by audiofilofine on 07-06-2011
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 Paul S wrote:
Here's something from a guy perhaps better known for his direct radiators:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Atelier-Rullit-RH-T903-field-coil-drivers-/330581513356?pt=Vintage_Electronics_R2&hash=item4cf831948c

Best regards,
Paul


 for audiochickens
rullith as a nice fantasy, but high fidelity is another thing

Posted by Romy the Cat on 07-06-2011
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Audiofilofine,

I have no formed opinion about what Rulit does. I do not want to steer the subject of the thread to the wrong direction but can you share your view and your reasons why you feel that what Rulit does is a fantasy?

Rgs, the Cat

Posted by Romy the Cat on 07-06-2011
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 Romy the Cat wrote:
I will slowly upload, as time permits to write them, different posts on the subject of Ultimate MF Compression Driver. 

The subject of bandwidth for Ultimate MF Compression Driver is complicated subject. If to look at the major questions for this subject then they will be the very simple: how low it shall go and how high shall it go. It does not sound complicated the answer is not so simple.

Let start from “how high shall it go”. There are a few schools of MF implementation by compression drives:

a)  MF driver gores to 6K, then another upper MF driver and then tweeter.
b)  MF driver goes to 10K-12K and then tweeter.
c)  MF driver goes to 6K and then tweeter.
d)  MF driver goes to 15K and then tweeter.
e)  MF driver goes all the way up and no additional tweeter used.

Let analyze the implementations.

The implementation A. There are very few companies that support this implementation. This setting requires superb driver’s time alignment, axes aliment and driver’s TTH characteristic match. This configuration is the best suites for multiamping. The major problem with this configuration is to dealing with lobbying of HF drivers but with vertical configuration it is doable. Ironically the only company that supports this configuration (Goto) does not believe in alignment, vertical configuration and their reputation in TTH filed is very questionable.  Anyhow, it is a legitimate configuration but I do not feel that this is Ultimate configuration for MF driver as it is two or more divers that cover MF. The biggest problem with it is the fact the very few people use this configuration and therefore there are very few or I would say none of the drivers made for this configuration, and whatever is made id not tested properly. No one will do a dedicated compression driver for one octave, like from 6kHz to 12kHz. What companies do is to designate very much the same driver to be upper or lower MF by using diaphragms with different Fs.  Some very few manufactures (like Goto) do make different drivers for upper and lower MF but since Goto users are mostly Morons and Goto themselves are very controversial I would not trust to what they do.

The implementation B. This configuration that I use and I find it more comfortable for Ultimate MF Compression Driver. From one side the driver does not go to high and do not deal with problem in implementation C. From another side the 12K is itself is self-sufficient listening range and an addition tweeter does not add sound but there the artifact of sound. It is very important as driving tweet up and down you do not change the amount of sound that tweet output as it happen in the configuration A but you rather change ONLY the amount to HF. If tweeter is closed very low, like 5-6K then you can’t adjust your HF and you MF separately.

The implementation C. This is the configuration that I do not like. The MF and Tweeter are locked and need to be balance according to MF and there is no way to dial in the HF. Some people go away by using very harsh tweeters in this configuration or the tweeter that have a small thump at 12-13K region. This give some help bit still I find it very flexible. Your room and your listening distance might have very different acoustic requirement at 6K and 12K and using a single driver that cover the whole upper MF and HF range is a bit problematic in my view.

The implementation D is not bad if our driver can handle it. The very minor problem that I see in compression drivers is hat in order the driver to be able comfortably and clearly to shoot all the way to 15K the drivers need to have small and very stiff diaphragms. Thos small- diaphragms most of the time demonstrate harmonic deficiency across MF and I more incline to use MF compression driver with fuller body.

The implementation E. In my estimation it never happened but it always right thing to do to switch your playback this configuration and to hear what your MF driver dose atop.

So, my own preference is to have MF with bass channels to run with playback and to have auditable a full range, fully balanced sound. Then add a tweeter but very surgically and very purposefully.   Mostly the configurations B feel friendlier to me. Still, I have to admit that if a person knows what he is doing and have right objectives then the very identical sonic results might be obtained by using any of the mentions configurations.

Now about the bass region – how low an Ultimate MF Compression Driver shell do? Some people would like to have a driver that goes down to 200Hz and some people use a driver from 1000-1500Hz and up. If the driver has bottom of 900Hz as many of them are then they mostly too cold sounding drivers. I think the ultimate range of MF compression driver still starts from 500Hz.It would be nicer to have a driver to go lower but an Ultimate MF Compression Driver would be use in Ultimate configuration that in my mind imply a dedicated lower MF channel the remove the LF stress from MF diaphragm. So, if the Ultimate MF Compression Driver is used from 1000-1500Hz then why shall it be able to play 500Hz? The answer is: he harmonic reserve – the driver that will be suited for 500Hz will have larger cone and softer sustention and consequentially it will play 3khz with more harmonic richness.

So my vote is for 500Hz- 12000/13000Hz driver. That is all that is bandwidth related…

The Cat

Posted by audiofilofine on 07-06-2011
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 Romy the Cat wrote:
Audiofilofine,

I have no formed opinion about what Rulit does. I do not want to steer the subject of the thread to the wrong direction but can you share your view and your reasons why you feel that what Rulit does is a fantasy?

Rgs, the Cat

are only old obsolete  driver cocktail with homemade ingredients.
no measure, no method, no philosophy...nothing , only diy fantasy

Posted by Romy the Cat on 07-06-2011
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 audiofilofine wrote:

are only old obsolete  driver cocktail with homemade ingredients.
no measure, no method, no philosophy...nothing , only diy fantasy

Yes, I do taste some slurp of “diy cult fantasy” in Rulit’s action, the romanticizing old drivers, creating the legion’s around the and so on. But it is the business nitch he is in and I know that he is associated in Russia with the people who are full time eBay saliva droppers – the guys who run Vintage Audio site. I very much hate those people from Retro Audio. Not to mention that for soviets is very typical to search a high spiritual meaning for the shiny crap that they dig out at Western junk-yards.

Still, the fact that he is associated with the primitive fools who run a chain of second hand shops and pawn shops in Russia does not necessary signify anything. Also, the fact that you are and I am not familiar with his measures, methods, or philosophy means that he has none of them.  The only familiarity I have about Rulit is by a few eBay actions that I seen from him. You have seen a lot of measures, methods or philosophy at eBay, have you? Sure, Rulit ride the hype and trying to brash up from it some business but it not necessarily mean that what he does is bad.

The point that I am trying to make is that there are predictable things and there are not predictable things. In my estimation what Rulit does comply with the things that have non predictable results. Knowing him personally and knowing his objectives it would be possible to predict the thing but I (and perhaps you) do not know him and with it would be necessary to actually experience what he does.

Sure, in some reading between the lines some expectation might be built but I have no need to built any expectations as I have absolutely no reference about what Rulit does. I have seen some Russian people went with Rulit implementation and report great results. Still all those people that did it where very much idiots and in my estimation their opinion on the subject was worthless.

So, as any beef you have with Rulit besides the fact that you are not familiar with Rulit measures, methods, and his philosophy?

Rgs, Romy the Cat

Posted by audiofilofine on 07-06-2011
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 Romy the Cat wrote:

 audiofilofine wrote:

are only old obsolete  driver cocktail with homemade ingredients.
no measure, no method, no philosophy...nothing , only diy fantasy

Yes, I do taste some slurp of “diy cult fantasy” in Rulit’s action, the romanticizing old drivers, creating the legion’s around the and so on. But it is the business nitch he is in and I know that he is associated in Russia with the people who are full time eBay saliva droppers – the guys who run Vintage Audio site. I very much hate those people from Retro Audio. Not to mention that for soviets is very typical to search a high spiritual meaning for the shiny crap that they dig out at Western junk-yards.

Still, the fact that he is associated with the primitive fools who run a chain of second hand shops and pawn shops in Russia does not necessary signify anything. Also, the fact that you are and I am not familiar with his measures, methods, or philosophy means that he has none of them.  The only familiarity I have about Rulit is by a few eBay actions that I seen from him. You have seen a lot of measures, methods or philosophy at eBay, have you? Sure, Rulit ride the hype and trying to brash up from it some business but it not necessarily mean that what he does is bad.

The point that I am trying to make is that there are predictable things and there are not predictable things. In my estimation what Rulit does comply with the things that have non predictable results. Knowing him personally and knowing his objectives it would be possible to predict the thing but I (and perhaps you) do not know him and with it would be necessary to actually experience what he does.

Sure, in some reading between the lines some expectation might be built but I have no need to built any expectations as I have absolutely no reference about what Rulit does. I have seen some Russian people went with Rulit implementation and report great results. Still all those people that did it where very much idiots and in my estimation their opinion on the subject was worthless.

So, as any beef you have with Rulit besides the fact that you are not familiar with Rulit measures, methods, and his philosophy?

Rgs, Romy the Cat


the bikecan notgo to the moon, just look atthe photo, no need totry it
thinkthat awoofer ora diaphragmconstructedin the cellar withshreds ofpaper towelscould haveperformancehi-fi?
fieldcoilis to buildsomethingfor funisanotherto sellat those prices


Posted by Paul S on 07-06-2011
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It may be old to some, but it is new to me what Rullit wrote on his latest auction for what (I got) he hopes will become his +/- "popular/production" driver series, the "Aero" drivers.  What he wrote there is that he means his drivers to be like a good wine glass, to collect and properly present the qualities of the sound/music for the "customer" to savor.  Personally, I would never approach a special wine without my special wine glass; I am not joking.  Then, Rullit goes on to talk about porcelain plates for food, and he loses me.  This time he also says that the speakers are supposed to present the sound well but not be an addition or subtraction.  Who could argue with this?  Maybe nothing really changes in the drivers or the approach yet; but if he really believes this, then maybe this will one day be his results?

Paul S

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