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Horn-Loaded Speakers
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Posted by serenechaos on 10-19-2008
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-Background-
Enspired by Jeffery Jacksons system as displayed @ VSAC, I'm building a five-way horn system. 
Tapped horn for up to ~80Hz; w/ Eminence driver
65Hz Tractrix from ~80Hz to ~400Hz w/ fane 8";
250Hz LeCleach from ~400Hz to ~2kHz;
Oblate Spheroid to match 2kHz crossover point, to 10kHz;
JBL 2405 ribbon from 10kHz up. 
After many questions and much advice from Jeffery, as well as John Hasquin on Horn building, I think I'm well on the way with that part.   

I have a pair of Radian 850PBs and 475PBs to use at first, but would like to build compression drivers matched to the 400 - 2K and 2K - 10K frequency ranges. 
I've not had much luck in finding information on how to size... 
1) Magnet sturcture, material, strength, permanet or fieldcoil.
2) Phase plug configuration-- dome size, shape, rings, or "tangerine" openings.
3) Diaphram material, surround material
4) Compression ratio
5) How all these, and everything else affect Sound. 

Any suggestions, directions on where to find literature, etc, would be appreciated. 
Thanks,
Robert

Posted by Romy the Cat on 10-19-2008
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 serenechaos wrote:
-Background-
Enspired by Jeffery Jacksons system as displayed @ VSAC, I'm building a five-way horn system.

How are you planning to power the thing? The amplification pattern will affect the selection of your channels.

 serenechaos wrote:
65Hz Tractrix from ~80Hz to ~400Hz w/ fane 8";

It will not work. Fine 8” is a good driver with 86dB air resonance and it might be good for 100Hz horn minimum. In 65Hz horn the 8" Fane will be underperforming.

 serenechaos wrote:

250Hz LeCleach from ~400Hz to ~2kHz;
Oblate Spheroid to match 2kHz crossover point, to 10kHz;

Might I ask why you desired to  use two channels in this range with 2K of split? You will pay with some near filed restriction in this configuration.

 serenechaos wrote:
I have a pair of Radian 850PBs and 475PBs to use at first, but would like to build compression drivers matched to the 400 - 2K and 2K - 10K frequency ranges.

And what specific moments you do not find satisfactory with you Radians that it inspired you to build your own drivers? I might have some leads for the rest of you questions but it would be interesting to hear what your sonic strategic objectives are.

The Cat

Posted by serenechaos on 10-20-2008
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At first I plan to power the thing SET, with a known, existing amp (a  triode wired EL84) which I've already built and know the Sound.  It is not bad, but a little "warm" sounding (second harmonics, and is low powered for low frequencies. 
Then I use a 304TL amp, (under construction, another known, a much cleaner sound, ~ 5 wpc). 
After I get the horns built, and working, (play with crossover points, etc) build dedicated SETs for each channel. 
I don't want to attack too many variables at once. 

Since this thread is for compression drivers, I didn't go into detail on horns; but horns and amps information is necessary to talk about compression drivers...  
The "65Hz Tractrix" is only part of the story; that's the flare rate.  
It is truncated @ 68.9"; which would give a 3 1/2' mouth, or 30" x 60" if cut in half-moon shape, as Jeffery's installation was @ VSAC http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?PostID=7467 .  Only I plan to mount these mid-bass horns to the ceiling, which will necessitate reversing the order of the other horns as well.  I spent quite a bit of time talking to Jeffery about it, running sims, then re-discussing it with him.  As this is new to me, I thought I better ask someone who's done it before. I also discussed it with John Hasquin in depth several times.  We not only discussed horn making, but he also approved the idea, and added ideas to change if it didn't work out at first.  It may not work, but I'm going to try it.  If the fane doesn't have enough umph, I'll use something else, or make a driver that does. 

The whole idea is to keep all the horns and drivers in about a 2 1/2 octave spread. 
To keep everything in the middle of its most "comfortable" "resonate" operating frequency. 
Not to force anything too high or too low. 
The mid-hi and mid-low expansion rates and cut-offs are also designed to match directivity at the crossover point.  (60 degrees @ 2kHz).  Again verified by both the above.

Integration between all channels is one of the main things I'm trying to achieve. 
I keep thinking of the Oswalds Mills installation @ RMAF. 
It sounded like three very nice drivers, not one coherent speaker system. 
I want everything to have the same "voice." 
Robert

Posted by Romy the Cat on 10-20-2008
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 serenechaos wrote:
At first I plan to power the thing SET, with a known, existing amp (a  triode wired EL84) which I've already built and know the Sound.  It is not bad, but a little "warm" sounding (second harmonics, and is low powered for low frequencies. 
Then I use a 304TL amp, (under construction, another known, a much cleaner sound, ~ 5 wpc). 
After I get the horns built, and working, (play with crossover points, etc) build dedicated SETs for each channel. 
I don't want to attack too many variables at once. 

The reason I asked about amplification is because the type of amplification you use has a relation to the type of the magnets the amp might with comfortably.  Also, the amount of the amps would inform if you have opportunity to manage harmonics and transients for each channel independently. So, it will be a single-ended triode amp and in future possible DSET, right?

 serenechaos wrote:
Since this thread is for compression drivers, I didn't go into detail on horns; but horns and amps information is necessary to talk about compression drivers...   I also discussed it with John Hasquin in depth several times.  We not only discussed horn making, but he also approved the idea, and added ideas to change if it didn't work out at first.  It may not work, but I'm going to try it.  If the fane doesn't have enough umph, I'll use something else, or make a driver that does. 

Well, if you talk with John Hasquin about horns then you do not need to talk about horn with me. John has was more superior intellect about horns then I do and you are in good hands with John.

 serenechaos wrote:
The whole idea is to keep all the horns and drivers in about a 2 1/2 octave spread. 
To keep everything in the middle of its most "comfortable" "resonate" operating frequency.  
Not to force anything too high or too low. 
The mid-hi and mid-low expansion rates and cut-offs are also designed to match directivity at the crossover point.  (60 degrees @ 2kHz).  Again verified by both the above.

OK, but you need to understand that you will pay the “minimum proximity” penalty for this. According to the Macondo's Axioms you will need to position channels vertically.  And if so then you will have 3 relatively high frequency firing channels that would take ~3 foot of height. If you do not care about near-field then it is fine but if you do then be advise that the idea of mid-hi and mid-low channels might set the minimum  distance where the drivers are integrated for 1-2 feet back.

 serenechaos wrote:
Integration between all channels is one of the main things I'm trying to achieve. 
I keep thinking of the Oswalds Mills installation @ RMAF. 
It sounded like three very nice drivers, not one coherent speaker system. 
I want everything to have the same "voice." 

Well, the Oswalds Mill installation is not something that that I consider worth any attrition. My attitude to the guy who run the Mill is well know – he is an idiot, anything he touches is idiotic and anything he does has a huge stamp of idiocy on it. If playbacks are reflections of our objective in sound reproduction then the Oswalds Mill’s systems, ideas and steps are the pure reflection of that Jonathan Weiss’ idiocy. The showy, empty and scared peace of fucking nothingness and his audio does reflect it. There is nothing further that can be said about it.

Anyhow, I still kind of did not hear from you what are you trying to do, not how but rather what. It is not that you need to share but my mine in audio work in different way (http://www.romythecat.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?PostID=432). Whatever you put together and connect to amps will sound. The question is what kind sound are you looking for?

The Cat

Posted by serenechaos on 10-20-2008
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So, it will be a single-ended triode amp and in future possible DSET, right?
Yes

OK, but you need to understand that you will pay the “minimum proximity” penalty for this.
Yes, this is something Jeffery warned me about, "Romy has that vertical thing right, and you run out of room."  Yes, it is ~ three feet of height, and Yes, I want to listen near field. 

Anyhow, I still kind of did not hear from you what are you trying to do, not how but rather what.
I don't understand the question?
What is it I don't like about my present system?

My present system is a single driver, back loaded horn!
I don't like the limits I've already enumerated in other thread (dynamics, frequency range, ability to resolve complex material), and I don't like the delayed sound I hear of the wave from the front of the driver, compared to the back of the driver. 
I'm starting over, from a clean sheet of paper, so to speak, building a front loaded horn system. 

I had seen John Hasquin's blog, emailed him to ask many questions about front loaded horns. 
I went to VSAC, heard Jeffery Jacksons five-way GOTO driver system. 
It was a far better solution than anything else I've ever heard, but out of my price range (I can't afford the GOTO drivers).  I ask Jeffery a lot of questions, and am going from there. 

Robert 

Posted by Romy the Cat on 10-20-2008
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I see, I misunderstood you, Robert. I was under impression that you “speak horns” and that you have lived with variety of horn-loaded playbacks and ideas and now you have decided to go for making your own compression drivers. If you did not and it would be your first multi-wave installation then I would encourage you to put the idea of own compression driver in back burner for a while. You see, a sound of compression driver might be assessed only in context of own charnel and only in context of everything else. It would be defect for me or anybody else to pitch you ideas what to try with compression drivers until you have you own ways to sonically evaluate the validity of those proposals. So, if I were you then I would build your multi-wave system, use any  conventional drives you have and then, after you get the reference points of what you are getting I would  consider what  specifically I would like to address/improve  by the introduction of my custom-made compression driver.

BTW, if you pick brain with Jeffery Jackson then, considering what he posted at this site, he sounds like a lucid person to ask for horn advisces (I can’t believe advice has no plural!!!). Between, John and Jeffery you would hardy need anybody else.

The Cat

Posted by serenechaos on 10-20-2008
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I'm mainly concerned about three things:

1) I know I'm using the larger compression driver outside (below) its designed operating range, and it may not work well there, although just band-passing it in this range, and using it at reduced volume without a horn, it seems to work ok. 

2) The mid-bass may be better served by a compression driver--I don't know... 

2) I'm just trying to collect information, so I will at least know a little bit about compression drivers if and when I do build them. 
Robert

Posted by Romy the Cat on 10-20-2008
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Robert, what I meant is following: when you will be collecting requirements for you own drivers specification and will evaluate the implementation methods then you need to have you own identity what you are trying to do. I might post a lot of different thoughts about what might work interestingly in compression drivers. I am sure others would do the same but it will be not definitive direction but rather an array for exploration. No one can defiantly and predictable say hop the driver will sound and in particularly no one can say how it will be sound loaded into a horn. So, when you hear people talk about requirement to the drivers you need to have a lot of YOUR attitude to discriminate information and to accept only what makes send to you. Otherwise you will get conversed into junky aka your Oswalds Mill’s guy of the Brazilian retard Angeloitacare who jangler the empty phase with no understanding of the phase’s meaning.

If I were in your shoe I would take make as you wish but wish a slight correction:

65Hz Tractrix from ~80Hz to ~800Hz w/ fane 8" ( or better driver)
250Hz LeCleach from ~800Hz to ~10kHz
JBL 2405 ribbon from 10kHz up

As you see I leave away the sub 800Hz horn and combined two MF horn into one. The bass horn is a pain in ass.  It is a good idea to see if your wife will tolerate 80Hz horn before you go for something larger. Ask, Jessie – he will read you a lecture about it… Also, MF horns only is already something that would allow you to play with playback and to make own conclusions.  Also, I combined for now two MF drivers into one – it is simpler, smaller and you always will be able to convert the universal MF channel into lower MF channel and then add one more supplementary upper MF channel. You need to pick a good and neutral MF driver; I always propose the JBL 375/2440 or the similar and make the given system to sound right. Then, only then, after you identify what in your view the system weakness, you will be in position to evaluate your own requirement and to how you would develop you playback further. At least it is how I see the things…

It is a lot of work and I am not sure it I go in there is I start from scratch. So, you still have your chance do not fuck up a few years of your life…

Posted by serenechaos on 10-20-2008
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Robert, what I meant is following: when you will be collecting requirements for you own drivers specification and will evaluate the implementation methods then you need to have you own identity what you are trying to do. I might post a lot of different thoughts about what might work interestingly in compression drivers. I am sure others would do the same but it will be not definitive direction but rather an array for exploration. No one can defiantly and predictable say hop the driver will sound and in particularly no one can say how it will be sound loaded into a horn. So, when you hear people talk about requirement to the drivers you need to have a lot of YOUR attitude to discriminate information and to accept only what makes send to you. 
Ahh yes. This is the heart of the matter isn't it? 
It is impossible to know (objectively) how a driver is really going to sound until it is in the system, and even then how an individual (subjectively) will recieve it, and if it will "solve an existing problem." 
I'm just looking for any good information on how really good drivers are built; and where to look for if there are problems.  As you have evaluated quite a few drivers I thought you (or someone else) might have some suggestions.  I ask everyone I talk to, read everything I can.  File what makes sense, discard what doesn't. 
If I were in your shoe I would take make as you wish but wish a slight correction:

This is a possibility.  Originally I was thinking along those lines, just to simplify things at first, but I had a 600Hz crossover point in mind.  But the lower crossover point integrates better with the mid-bass.  (My mid-bass will be deeper than yours, and won't have as long a tail and go as high). 
Yes, the mid-bass horn is a pain.  Bulky and awkward but what else will work as well in that range?  Nothing.
John, Jeffery, and Josh had all recommended the Radians as good baseline drivers to start with, so I'm trying them.  I may pick up some 375/2440/2441s to compare. 

Wife Acceptance Factor-- John Hasquin tried to warn me about this too.  Jeffery understands, he was there. 
When we were @ VSAC, my wife and I sat down in the room Jeffery's system was playing in. 
After about a minute and a half, she quietly turned to me and said "you can build one of those, right?" with this hopeful look in her eyes.  To her WAF is about what it Sounds like, not what it looks like, or how much room it takes up.  She thinks it funny that some people seem to "hear with their eyes." 
I've had the 80Hz horns mocked up on the floor for a couple months, and been experimenting with the midrange drivers in various cludged together horns.  The only complaints are about the Sound, when it gets worse, and comments when it is better.  Sometimes she can hear what seem like minor changes from the other end of the house... 
Robert

Posted by Wojtek on 10-20-2008
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I think it's already too late for that. A man should not go around and listen to stupid horn installations which can screw him up for a life 0).
Robert , can you say why 65Hz truncated tractrix and not rectangular half space hypex or expo horns if you're going to use ceilling mount and cross that low ?
Something simmilar to Jeffrey's Goto horn ? Half round long midbass will be a real PITA to make.
Regards, W

Posted by Romy the Cat on 10-20-2008
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 serenechaos wrote:
I'm just looking for any good information on how really good drivers are built; and where to look for if there are problems.  As you have evaluated quite a few drivers I thought you (or someone else) might have some suggestions.  I ask everyone I talk to, read everything I can.  File what makes sense, discard what doesn't.

Ok, when I have time and  be in mood I will try to compile some thoughts about custom MF drivers (are we talking about MF drivers, right?). BTW, you might get in touch with Richard – one of the guys of Cogent group. Richard is as well as you are a modeling-machinist and he built the Cogent drivers. I am sure you will find a lot of common grounds to discuss.

 serenechaos wrote:
When we were @ VSAC, my wife and I sat down in the room Jeffery's system was playing in.  After about a minute and a half, she quietly turned to me and said "you can build one of those, right?" with this hopeful look in her eyes. 

What a stimulation! Where do you found women like this? Or perhaps your wife just a smart woman who knows how to live being a women – in either case congratulations and accept my envy.

The Cat

Posted by serenechaos on 10-20-2008
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Wojtek,
Yes, too late.  Once you've heard a good "stupid horn installation", there's no going back is there? 

Yes, something similar to what was shown in Jeffery's GOTO installation. It should work the same on the floor or ceiling, (loading wise) as long as the mid-bass coming from above doesn't sound strange.  I'll build them so I can mount them either way, and try them both ways just in case... 
Why? Long story, but here's a quick, dis-jointed explanation which boils down to less ripple, less distortion. 
The horn was designed around the 80Hz crossover point on Jeffery's suggestion, and everything else around that.  I tried Tractrix, Expo & Hypex.  When you truncate they're close anyway, but John said the same thing about expansion profile and distortion.  Expo & Hypex give a little more bass extension, tractrix has smoother frequency response, less ripples.  It's taken me months to get this far, and this is the best yet.  It's flat + / - 1 1/2 dB from 80 - 400 Hz, with a slow roll-off after that.  The mid-bass was the hardest piece to get to work right on paper, and will probably be the hardest to actually build.
I know many people say not to use tractrix for mid-bass, that you can't annul the reactance with the compression chamber volume, but I'm banking on that not being true. 
That's not what the math says, or what people say who've actually done it.  That's who I believe. 
Like I said before, Jeffery's system sounded so much better than anything else I've ever heard, that I do listen to whatever he says as comming from someone who's been there, done that.  
 
Romy,
No rush at all on my side!  I'm just trying to gather resources. 
MF-- Anything you care to share thoughts on. 
Mid-bass, low-mid, or high-mid especially. 
I doubt I'd mess with the sub or tweeter--I haven't built the sub yet, I'm told THs of this type work fine as is, and I have been using the JBL 2405 and can't fault it if crossed high. 

Congratulations accepted, however I must add I feel very lucky, and realize I had nothing to do with it.  I think the "perhaps just a smart woman who knows how to live being a women" is what's going on.  That and she loves music. 
Robert


Posted by serenechaos on 10-20-2008
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Romy, 
Somewhat on topic, but it could go many different places--
My wife told me that I really should thank you for posting things like:
http://www.goodsoundclub.com/GetPost.aspx?PostID=3184&Phrase=kharma 
that help people like her know what to listen for, even if it it BAD Sound, and why. 
Not many places one can get educational information like this, and it is very helpful. 
So, Thank You from Deb.
Robert


Posted by serenechaos on 10-21-2008
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 Romy the Cat wrote:
OK, but you need to understand that you will pay the “minimum proximity” penalty for this. According to the Macondo's Axioms you will need to position channels vertically.  And if so then you will have 3 relatively high frequency firing channels that would take ~3 foot of height. If you do not care about near-field then it is fine but if you do then be advise that the idea of mid-hi and mid-low channels might set the minimum  distance where the drivers are integrated for 1-2 feet back.

 serenechaos wrote:
Integration between all channels is one of the main things I'm trying to achieve. 
I keep thinking of the Oswalds Mills installation @ RMAF. 
It sounded like three very nice drivers, not one coherent speaker system. 
I want everything to have the same "voice." 
The Cat

How were the Macondo's Axioms arrived at?
By listening? 
I am wondering why/what happens if channels are not positioned vertically. 
What does it do to the Sound? 

You spoke above about the "minimum proximity" penalty. 
Does this affect only how far back the minimum distance for driver integration? 
Or other things as well? 

What other things have you experienced to effect integration of all channels? 
Thanks again,
Robert

Posted by Romy the Cat on 10-21-2008
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 serenechaos wrote:

How were the Macondo's Axioms arrived at?
By listening? 
I would encourage you to read carefully the following page:
http://www.romythecat.com/MacondoAcousticSystem.aspx
 serenechaos wrote:
I am wondering why/what happens if channels are not positioned vertically. 
What does it do to the Sound? 

It relates to lateral resolution of human hearing. We have very high lateral resolution and very low vertical resolution, I do not remember exact numbers in time of angle by frequency but you might recognize it without numbers. Take a look at the configuration of human head - ears are located on right and left side creating base for horizontal space localization. The space localization is a delta between arrival time to right and left ear, so if the sound source is somewhere within horizontal plane then the aviving delta works. However, if the source is in vertical plane then the location of our ears not optimal to create a sufficient distance between the vertical receptors.  To have the same vertical resolution as we have horizontal resolution we would need to have one ear at chin and another atop of our head. BTW, if you observe the lives of the most sophisticated God’s creatures – Cats then you would see that Cats use “altered” space localization. When a Cheetah sits atop of a hill, observing her territory and see a pray then she try to estimate a distance to the play. Her ears are located atop of her head and very close – there is very little lateral bias and her vertical resolution is even smaller then humans. So, what the Pussy does – she tilt her head in side in order temporarily to increase vertical bias between her ears and to assess vertical distance (remember, she is atop of a hill) very precisely. Sometime dogs do it but they do it not because they are smart but because they try to imitate Cats.

 serenechaos wrote:
You spoke above about the "minimum proximity" penalty. 
Does this affect only how far back the minimum distance for driver integration? 
Or other things as well? 

I do not think that if the drivers are match properly (according to their TTH characteristics) then it might affect others things. You also have top take under consideration though is that your MF drivers will be shooting behind the mouth of the upperbass horn and that MF driver will have much smaller horns. The whole idea shell be viewed from a perspective of vignetteing.

Romy the Cat

Posted by mats on 10-21-2008
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Very interesting about the lateral vs. vertical resolution.

According to "Raptor Force", a 2007 Nature documentary, the owl can locate a vole under the snow based on its offset ear geometry. "Like us, the owl can find the left-right position of a noise. But the Great Gray owl has a trick that we don't, allowing it to pinpoint a sound: Its ears are at different heights; one points up the other one down." Presumably this allows them to judge depth as well as side to side location.

http://www.shoppbs.org/product/index.jsp?productId=2961619

Posted by serenechaos on 10-21-2008
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I kept thinking about cats and cat food (also known as birds) listening habits this afternoon. 

That's why parrots bob up and down, as well as (less often) twist back and forth on one leg sometimes-- to triangulate and pinpoint a location in all directions. 

Inferior species like people and dogs don't appear to have these abilities... 
I've noted it often, my hearing, and perception, in many regards (not just depth or imaging), greatly diminishes when laying back on the couch to listen. 

I started thinking about all this due to Bert Doppenberg's Swing I heard @ RMAF. 
He said some people prefer it to always be vertical, but he prefers it with the mid and high (co-axial horn to the outside, and the bass to the inside, because there is a wider  image tht way, and there is too much bass if the bass horns are too close to the wall in a small room. 

Robert

Posted by Romy the Cat on 10-21-2008
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 serenechaos wrote:
I started thinking about all this due to Bert Doppenberg's Swing I heard @ RMAF. 
He said some people prefer it to always be vertical, but he prefers it with the mid and high (co-axial horn to the outside, and the bass to the inside, because there is a wider  image tht way, and there is too much bass if the bass horns are too close to the wall in a small room. 

Bert Doppenberg's Swing is not really is inductive from this perspective, there are a few reasons why. BD design’s speakers are compromised from many perspective and the reasons why Bert can go away with it is because his customers are mostly Morons. He is very different business: he build middling-something, create a network of ass kissing supporters who know no difference and then brew within them opportunities for new sale. Sound there is extremely mediocre, objective are limited. From a few comment that he made it looks like his is not an idiot and there is a very high possibly that he hates the crap the he sells. In fact I can bet on it. Still, it pays his mortgage, and there is nothing wrong with it. Somebody sells hotdog, somebody trade stocks, somebody sit in orchestra and render notes, somebody drive track and somebody pull teeth. Bert sells speakers. So, what? They are all juts professional opposition and it all has no relation to audio and to relationship with audio that I am interested in. I call the companies of Bert Doppenberg's as the ‘commodity audio’…

The caT

Posted by serenechaos on 10-22-2008
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I wasn't trying to critique Bert, or even get into an in-depth critique on the Swing, more Compression Driver configurations -- vertical vs. angled, and coaxial, (and maybe other factors which affect Sound). 
But I'm more and more realizing what I'm most concerned about is subjective Sound, and I don't even know how to properly describe it... 
Maybe that's why you went into more description of Bert, and his business? 
You feel it is somehow reflected in the speakers Sound? 
I will go so far as to say that I liked the Sound of Swing better than any other speaker at RMAF. 
The problems I had with it (Sound wise)-- I am trying not to repeat what made these things happen. 
I don't know if it was the "angled, and coaxial" BMS drivers, the BMS drivers themselves, the diaphrams, or the source or amps.  My wife kept saying she would like to hear those speakers with vinyl and good tube amps. 
And that's just talking about the mid-range. 
How can I say it? 
I liked it better than over a hundred other things I listened to that day, but all the colors were mixed with dark brown... 
Robert 

Posted by Romy the Cat on 10-22-2008
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 serenechaos wrote:
I wasn't trying to critique Bert, or even get into an in-depth critique on the Swing….  Maybe that's why you went into more description of Bert, and his business?  You feel it is somehow reflected in the speakers Sound? 
I went to the description of Bert and his business because it IS reflective in decision process those people do. I hope you understand that objectives around here are not to stratify the hi-fi companies in some kind of hierarchy but rather trying to assess different methods and success/failure patterns for specific sound reproduction tasks.  The conclusions might be questionable (like anybody else conclusions) but my motivation I think are free from any non-sonic conditions. Unfortunately it is not the case for commercial companies that operate under enforcement of various completely not related to sound factors. Unfortunately Bert with his  company, also with many others are not in journey for an goals of  Abstract Audio™ but they rather render renderable with no much care about absolute  value of accomplishment

 serenechaos wrote:
I will go so far as to say that I liked the Sound of Swing better than any other speaker at RMAF. 
The problems I had with it (Sound wise)-- I am trying not to repeat what made these things happen. 
I don't know if it was the "angled, and coaxial" BMS drivers, the BMS drivers themselves, the diaphrams, or the source or amps.  My wife kept saying she would like to hear those speakers with vinyl and good tube amps. 
And that's just talking about the mid-range. 
How can I say it? 
I liked it better than over a hundred other things I listened to that day, but all the colors were mixed with dark brown... 
“Mixed with dark brown?” Hm, interesting… Whatever it was it was not related to offset. I never heard BD design speakers but I actively what Bret was trying to do with them, BTW, is he still drive them with his digital amps?  BTW, Sometimes in past I have wasted my time explaining it to that angeloitacare-cretin:

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/GetPost.aspx?PostID=2855

at that time he just pop up at my site and I did not know yet that he was a retarded idiot.

The Cat

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