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  »  New  The crossovering Messiah is coming...air capacitors..  The air-transformers from Santa...  Audio Discussions  Forum     6  67502  11-22-2004
  »  New  The Edgarhorn RTA response...  Poor quality crossover components?...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     7  86385  08-29-2007
12-06-2005 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 21
Post ID: 1838
Reply to: 1837
EdgarHorns and ... you

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 drdna wrote:
I appreciate the suggestions on the ceiling of the room; in my room the ceiling is about twelve feet tall and it opens on the side to another room with a taller skylight, so I do not know if this is a problem or not.  It may be worth investigating?

Also, I have tried many many kinds of wire in my system and I agree that the sound of silver is very distinctive -- I also can easily tell if I change a small piece of silver or copper wire in my system.  I have found that silver gives a very wonderful realism to the upper midrange and highs, but this is at the expense of the lower midrange which is kind of dulled and sucked out and I expect this is why Romy hates it so.  This seems much better when you are using a very fine silver foil, at least to my ears, but it is never the full, richer sound of the copper, but the copper is not as immediate-sounding as the silver to me either in the very upper midrange, so I think this is really a trade-off.

Maybe this is part of my problem with the EdgarHorn Titans however because the wire Bruce Edgar has inside the speakers looks like steel or copper coated with steel or silver (anyway it is a silvery-colored metal) and it is multi-stranded.  Everywhere else in my system I have only solid-core ultra-fine gauge wire, including the insides of all my equipment and my old speakers which I re-wired.  So perhaps this is part of the reason the "magic" is missing.  After I figure out how to make these speakers disappear, perhaps next I should examine re-wiring the speakers?


Adrian,

I’m not kidding: all those things that we talking this there is irrelevant in your case and I would like you do not distract yourself on the irrelevant directions: cables, room treatment and etc. They all are important things but the problem that you describe is more basic then all little things. I usually suggest to people to install this system using the Radio Shock interconnect and the regular zip cords. Make it sound goon and THEN take advantage of better cabling and complicated room acoustic alternations. Your EdgarHorn, or any other speaker at this respect, should do fine bust being dropped at the floor and properly positioned. I have seen phenomenally perfuming sound coming from absolutely random systems in absolutely random condition where the speakers were installed properly. In smaller rooms those correct speakers positioning always exist. Phase-align your drivers and you should be fine. The "disappearing” trip is VERY simple trick for loudspeakers and it should not be a problem.

BTW, there is one more tip. Bruce Edgar bushtits his customers making them belie that his horns should be used next to the back wall and at far field. Whatever reasons motivate I am sure his customers deserved to be bul***ed. In reality horns are way more sensitive to any boundaries and partially to the back walls then common people usually believe. The horns must sit quite far form the walls, the further the better and partially the horn that use a dedicated direct radiator upper-bass horn. I would estimate then if you have 80Hz Edgar horn then the minimum distance from the horn to the walls should be 5”-6”. It is certainly not an absolute rule but what I have seen that is the upperbass horn (if it was not a boundary loaded, as if is was then they have other problems) is acoustically connected to the walls then ....you WILL NOT have a good upper mid range transient and your sound will be at the upper mid range with no contrast.

The caT


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-06-2005 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
drdna
San Francisco, California
Posts 526
Joined on 10-29-2005

Post #: 22
Post ID: 1839
Reply to: 1838
Re: EdgarHorns and ... you

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 Romy the Cat wrote:

...I would like you do not distract yourself on the irrelevant directions: cables, room treatment and etc. They all are important things but the problem that you describe is more basic then all little things...

...Bruce Edgar bushtits his customers making them belie that his horns should be used next to the back wall and at far field... The horns must sit quite far form the walls, the further the better and partially the horn that use a dedicated direct radiator upper-bass horn. I would estimate then if you have 80Hz Edgar horn then the minimum distance from the horn to the walls should be 5”-6”...


I did not mean to imply I was going to do all the room treatments and cable first, since I agree this is not the big problem, but only that I agreed it would be worth inspecting at some point. 

I don't know what Bruce recommends, but only what sounds best to me.  So far, the speakers are about 31.625 inches from the back wall and about 81.125 inches apart and this seems to be a good position for the 80 Hz horn; the other portion of the Titans I am still playing with.
12-09-2005 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
drdna
San Francisco, California
Posts 526
Joined on 10-29-2005

Post #: 23
Post ID: 1854
Reply to: 1839
EdgarHorns and phase

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Looking again at the EdgarHorns, the placement in the room seems nearly optimal and they are now properly time aligned.  Looking at the phase of the individual drivers and listening to each of them individually revealed that the tweeter was wired out of phase and the midrange and woofer were wired out of absolute phase,  Correcting this changed the sound from very good to stunning.  The speakers now disappear in the room and the sound is the best I have ever heard from a stereo.  Really wonderful to listen to, now! 

I understand why the previous owner traded these in for Cain & Cain horns; because the EdgarHorns were wired wrong!  I am amazed this could happen by a small manufacturer like Bruce Edgar who seems to take a lot of care about his products. 

But comparing to the sound of live music, it is still slightly blunted and like everything is stuck in the mud, so it gets a bit confused especially with orchestral music and begins to lose the living presence, although with small ensemble work the sound is very much lifelike and I can easily forget I am listening to stereo at times.  Next I think it will be appropriate to look at the level of the lower midrange horn and to consider rewiring the insides with good solid core wire (it is all Litz copper wire now).

Does this sound reasonable as a next step?

Adrian
12-09-2005 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 24
Post ID: 1856
Reply to: 1854
EdgarHorns and the ordinary pile of audio Morons.

 drdna wrote:
Looking again at the EdgarHorns, the placement in the room seems nearly optimal and they are now properly time aligned.  Looking at the phase of the individual drivers and listening to each of them individually revealed that the tweeter was wired out of phase and the midrange and woofer were wired out of absolute phase.

Adrian, I am glad that you resolved you dilemma. Considering the problem you described, it was pretty much, where I expected it to be. However your explanations are kind of sound strange to me. If your tweeter were out of phase with the rest of the drivers then it would not produce the problem you portrayed. Reversing polarity of the tweeter, even with second order filter, dose has some negative consequences but the do not manifest themselves in a way your explanations were. Most likely you had one of the MF or upper bass drive out of phase and doing your experiments you accidentally put in a correct polarity. It has nothing to do with the tweeters. Also, “listening to each of driver individually” you would not be able to get the drivers’ polarity (not to mention that the “absolute phase” has nothing to do with your case at all. The co-phaseinass of the drivers might be objectively detected by a $100 worth phase tested that I literally demand to buy any person who is wiling to talk with me about horns. An alternative way would be a run a dual-channels mono in-phase sweep and to monitor the center image….

 drdna wrote:
Correcting this changed the sound from very good to stunning.  The speakers now disappear in the room and the sound is the best I have ever heard from a stereo.  Really wonderful to listen to, now! 

Hm… I do not know how about the “stunning”. So far they juts “disappear in the room”. That is, as I previously said not a big deal and itself doe not signify anything.

 drdna wrote:
I understand why the previous owner traded these in for Cain & Cain horns; because the EdgarHorns were wired wrong!  I am amazed this could happen by a small manufacturer like Bruce Edgar who seems to take a lot of care about his products. 

It has nothing to do with Bruce Edgar and his sweatshop. The problem is YOU. You should stop to extend any credit to audio audiophile and treat all of them by default as a potential cretin unless they prove you otherwise. This is what I call the Presumption of Moronity ™, something that I employ for year and something that give me a phenomenal detecting rate among the audio hoodlums. It is obvious that the previous owner of your speakers was a Moron. You told that you brought a bunch of audio hoodlums to listen your phase-screwed Edgarhorns and “everyone who hears my system says it is the best thing ever and they are totally amazed and saying it sounds so lifelike”. Dose it say anything to you about the quality of this listening intelligence and the level moronity of this audio perception? Anyhow, do not be disappointed. The very same garbage sound that you had have 99% of all audio Morons ™ out there.  BTW, if you look at the “expert” on-line comments of that fool who sold you the speakers the you will see that he know among audio constituencies as “experienced audiophile” - within many internet sites you would find piles of morons similar to him…

 drdna wrote:
But comparing to the sound of live music, it is still slightly blunted and like everything is stuck in the mud, so it gets a bit confused especially with orchestral music and begins to lose the living presence, although with small ensemble work the sound is very much lifelike and I can easily forget I am listening to stereo at times.

This is very different subject and I would requite you to describe it deeper to figure out what frustrate you now. Do not forget that the Edgar’s horns have thier own intrinsic limitation rounded by the very primitive demands level of the target customers.

 drdna wrote:
Next I think it will be appropriate to look at the level of the lower midrange horn and to consider rewiring the insides with good solid core wire (it is all Litz copper wire now). Does this sound reasonable as a next step?

Absolutely not! I wound live the damn wiring alone. Unless you enjoy the process of changing them…

The Cat




"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-10-2005 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
drdna
San Francisco, California
Posts 526
Joined on 10-29-2005

Post #: 25
Post ID: 1858
Reply to: 1856
Re: EdgarHorns and the ordinary pile of audio Morons.

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 Romy the Cat wrote:

Considering the problem you described, it was pretty much, where I expected it to be. However your explanations are kind of sound strange to me. If your tweeter were out of phase with the rest of the drivers then it would not produce the problem you portrayed. 


Yes, you are correct.  I meant to write the midrange was out of phase.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
 
Also, “listening to each of driver individually” you would not be able to get the drivers’ polarity (not to mention that the “absolute phase” has nothing to do with your case at all.


Yes, I meant listening to each pair of tweeters, midranges, woofers individually.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
 
The co-phaseinass of the drivers might be objectively detected by a $100 worth phase tested that I literally demand to buy any person who is wiling to talk with me about horns. An alternative way would be a run a dual-channels mono in-phase sweep and to monitor the center image….


Yes, this is what I did actually.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
 
You should stop to extend any credit to audio audiophile and treat all of them by default as a potential cretin unless they prove you otherwise. This is what I call the Presumption of Moronity ™


For which I am ever grateful, as it has allowed me to pick up this speaker for a bargain price.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
 
This is very different subject and I would requite you to describe it deeper to figure out what frustrate you now.


I have found the next obvious glaring problem, which is contributing to the muddy sound I described earlier.  There is a mismatch between the two channels.  The right channel is very slightly softer than the left with a very slight change in the sound like it is vaguely from an old-fashioned radio, but very subtle.  I tested this by listening with a mono signal to each channel one at a time.  I can tell this from anywhere I stand, far away or with my ear right next to the speakers (so I do not think this is a room acoustics effect).

I found that the same signal from the same RCA output on the preamplifier through the same wire would make this different sound going to the right amplifier and speaker than going to the left amplifier and speaker.

So I switched the amplifiers and there was no difference.
Then I switched the speaker cable and there was no difference.
Then I switched the speakers and there was still no difference.

Then I became very confused and decided to see if you have any sugestions?
12-10-2005 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 26
Post ID: 1859
Reply to: 1858
Environmental magnetic influence to high sensitively?
 drdna wrote:
I have found the next obvious glaring problem, which is contributing to the muddy sound I described earlier.  There is a mismatch between the two channels.  The right channel is very slightly softer than the left with a very slight change in the sound like it is vaguely from an old-fashioned radio, but very subtle.  I tested this by listening with a mono signal to each channel one at a time.  I can tell this from anywhere I stand, far away or with my ear right next to the speakers (so I do not think this is a room acoustics effect).

I found that the same signal from the same RCA output on the preamplifier through the same wire would make this different sound going to the right amplifier and speaker than going to the left amplifier and speaker.

So I switched the amplifiers and there was no difference.
Then I switched the speaker cable and there was no difference.
Then I switched the speakers and there was still no difference.

Then I became very confused and decided to see if you have any sugestions?

I do not understand what you describe. One of the channels is softer. You mean the softer tonally or “softer” as having les db output? Take an AC voltmeter or a DB meter with a line input and measure the out voltage from you power amp feeding it by a reference not of stable amplitude. You right and left channels should have an identical voltage. The distance from the listing position to each MF driver should be also identical. You have to completely disregard the acoustics asymmetry of your room for right and left channels. The acoustics asymmetry is not an enemy but actually is very helpful tool…

The line level devised usesly more or less stable and mostly likely the deviation of gain in power amplifier usesly the problems. Another common problem is that the crossovers in right and the left channel are not bult identically…. Still you clamed that you switched speakers and amplifiers and did not detect any differents… Well, if I would knot how exactly the problem of “softness” manifest itself perhaps I might suggest something. Meanwhile, I have seen before how the specific magnetic fields might quite adhesively after what speakers do. I do not know the EdgarHorns crossover. I do not think they should be “serious” and I doubt that he tune then individually for each driver type. Still in his upper bass horn he most likely used a coil to low pass the channel. Most likely he use a second order with tweeter, which would demand coils. The make the EdgarHorns having 4 coils (+ MF and HF voice coils). During the operation of the drivers, and particularly of the air core coils were use in crossovers and if the speaker sit in a magnetic filed, the inductance of the drivers, coils talks to each other and produce quite auditable results…. Do not forget that you are in high sensitively work and with 110dB you have why should be able to pick your local AM station on your coils if you position them properly….

A few years ago I use 3 and something Henrys air-core coil made up with… 8ga wire. It was a barrel of cupper that acted like a sponge for any airborne dirt. I have in one side of my room (what right speaker lives) something that I called “Area 51”. At tie location (approximately 3’x3’) any coil suck in EMI from air with a force of a mid size back hole. If I positioned the coil in there then by changing the angle of the coil I was able to change sound quite tangibly. I did not measure the Gausses in there but I know what was going on and I ended up building sarcophagus for the right speakers crossover. I used CO-NETIC alloys for that reportedly has magnetic shielding 800 times stronger then steal of the same thickens. It worked very nice with exception that all of those Magnetic Shield Corporation’s products are quite expansive…

Well, something suggests me that you might have the very same problem. In fact may people with high sensitively drivers have then but not a lot of them have ability to understand or detect it as thier noisy and dirtily electronics mask out the effect of environmental magnetic influence…

Rgs,
The caT




"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-11-2005 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
CO
Posts 37
Joined on 11-18-2005

Post #: 27
Post ID: 1863
Reply to: 1859
Re: Environmental magnetic influence to high sensitively?

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 Romy the Cat wrote:

A few years ago I use 3 and something Henrys air-core coil made up with… 8ga wire. It was a barrel of cupper that acted like a sponge for any airborne dirt. I have in one side of my room (what right speaker lives) something that I called “Area 51”. At tie location (approximately 3’x3’) any coil suck in EMI from air with a force of a mid size back hole. If I positioned the coil in there then by changing the angle of the coil I was able to change sound quite tangibly. I did not measure the Gausses in there but I know what was going on and I ended up building sarcophagus for the right speakers crossover. I used CO-NETIC alloys for that reportedly has magnetic shielding 800 times stronger then steal of the same thickens. It worked very nice with exception that all of those Magnetic Shield Corporation’s products are quite expansive…

Well, something suggests me that you might have the very same problem. In fact may people with high sensitively drivers have then but not a lot of them have ability to understand or detect it as thier noisy and dirtily electronics mask out the effect of environmental magnetic influence…

Rgs,
The caT



Hi romy,

Was the coil shorted to be effective?

You did not see the need to do the other channel as well or the cost would not justify it?
If you only had that problem in one corner then te cause must have come from your own equipment or wiring? So what you mean is the EMI is directly sent out through the driver and not from being amplified bij the amp first ?
I have noticed a slight improvement by placing a ferrite on the speaker wires at the amp.


I have always wondered if its bad to use the energy efficiant lamps etc. Although alot of equipment also has swiching power supplies. And how about the neighbors.....

You have mentioned numerously that you notice the quality of power supply change. What kind of actions have you taken that dont harm the sound?

Maybe this last part should go in a new thread.

Regards, Collin


12-28-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
slack key
Hawaii
Posts 5
Joined on 12-28-2011

Post #: 28
Post ID: 17599
Reply to: 1822
Edgarhorns imaging and soundstage correction with DEQX
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I am interested to find out more information about how DEQX will help solve my issues with getting better soundstage, imaging and depth with the Edgarhorn Titans.  I read some reviews from the DEQX website and sent them an email but still waiting for more information.  Will the DEQX help or is soundstage and imaging an inherrent problem with horn speakers?
I recently listened to Magnepan's 1.7's and the soundstage and imaging were quite apparent compared to the Edgarhorns.  You are surrounded by the music whereas with the horn speakers this effect is somewhat achieved only with near-field listening.
The current model DEQX HD Express and Reference Calibration Kit is nearly $3k plus it is my understanding that if you want the DEQX to do the crossovers I would need separate amps for each driver.  This will complicate the setup with way too much equipment.
Are there any mods (for the speakers) that I should look into before going the DEQX route?
Thanks,
Marc 

12-28-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
scooter
Posts 161
Joined on 07-17-2008

Post #: 29
Post ID: 17609
Reply to: 17599
Wrong questions
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I don't want to hurt your feelings but this is a confusing set of questions; maybe you might spend some quality time thinking what your audio problems and end goals are. Some useful examples (and their evolution) are scattered throughout this site. None are perfect but the thought process and methodology is helpful.

Incidentally, digital EQ is a great way to kill sound. This site and others explain why; you can try it on your own of course if you aren't convinced. However, it is really helpful tool for calibration and testing purposes. 
12-28-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
slack key
Hawaii
Posts 5
Joined on 12-28-2011

Post #: 30
Post ID: 17610
Reply to: 17609
Edgarhorns - audio problems and end goals
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Thanks, Scooter.
I am glad to hear from someone so quickly.
I've been an "audiophile" for only 10 years or so.  With the Edgarhorns, I am currently using a Cyrus Brenneman integrated amp (KT100).  I also have a Yamamoto custom 2A3 (single plates) which I also like.
As for audio problems, you are correct, I really have to sit back and think about what to do.  Sure I want to improve what is now lacking.... soundstage, imaging and depth.  As for the sound, of course, I like the sound of horns but I have to sit in a precise spot (i.e not move my head) to get decent soundstage and imaging. Can I afford to spend more time and money to experiment with crossovers, digital EQ and other voodoo components (Z sleeves, ionizer, crystals, sound traps, super tweeters, Be diaphragms, Bybee filters, silver fuses, etc.... I have these) or have I reached the point where I should move back to solid state and Magnepan 3.7's.  I want to keep things simple.  I will search this site for more information (about digital EQ and other avenues related to horn speakers) and hope to gain some insight as to how far I want to take this.
Marc

12-28-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 31
Post ID: 17612
Reply to: 17610
Lost in space?
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 slack key wrote:
As for audio problems, you are correct, I really have to sit back and think about what to do.  Sure I want to improve what is now lacking.... soundstage, imaging and depth.  As for the sound, of course, I like the sound of horns but I have to sit in a precise spot (i.e not move my head) to get decent soundstage and imaging. Can I afford to spend more time and money to experiment with crossovers, digital EQ and other voodoo components (Z sleeves, ionizer, crystals, sound traps, super tweeters, Be diaphragms, Bybee filters, silver fuses, etc.... I have these) or have I reached the point where I should move back to solid state and Magnepan 3.7's.  I want to keep things simple.  I will search this site for more information (about digital EQ and other avenues related to horn speakers) and hope to gain some insight as to how far I want to take this.
Move your Edgarhorns further from the back wall and treat the back wall - it will give you the depth of imaging. To “sit in a precise spot” – that it absolutely normal – this is how all audio works, Are you planning to play golf while you are listening your Bruckner? While do you care about imaging if you are playing golf? If you care about imaging then be where the imaging shal be…

You will not find any useful information about digital EQ at this site. If you would like to play stupid games with DSP phase faking in order to get “more stereo” than you can bit it has nothing to do with digital EQ. BTW, digital EQ is not “other avenues related to horn speakers” but rather the refuge of horn speaker’s bottom eaters.

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?postID=775#775

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-29-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
drdna
San Francisco, California
Posts 526
Joined on 10-29-2005

Post #: 32
Post ID: 17617
Reply to: 17599
Edgarhorn, EQ, Soundstage
fiogf49gjkf0d
 slack key wrote:
I am interested to find out more information about how DEQX will help solve my issues with getting better soundstage, imaging and depth with the Edgarhorn Titans.
Marc, finally I have something to say. I also have the Edgarhorn speakers and use a 2A3 SET.  I have tried the DEQ in the past, and some people love this. I did not. I think it very much depends on what you want. The DEQ gave a very balanced and neutral frequency balance to the music, but for me it sucked out the soul of the music. In fact even without any so-called EQ, just having the DEQ in the system caused the sound to deteriorate. For me it is all about the connection to the Living Presence of the Sound, so it was not an acceptable solution. 

Now other people have used the DEQ and Edgarhorns for their satisfaction. They do get a very nice soundstage and tonal balance this way, even though to me the music becomes uninvolving and energy-sucking. If you are interested mostly in soundstage and microdetails, yes then this may be a good option for you. But that is not my interest, and with DEQX, the prana has left the prasad, so to speak. I could never imagine giving up the benefits of horn speakers for Maggies, as much as I loved them 20 years ago, but if you enjoy them then sell the horns and go with that because all speakers have different weaknesses and strengths. Audio is a fascinating exercise in design compromise. Don't waste your time thinking that you can make a speaker do something it is not good at with little tweaks; just get a different speaker.

That said, I bet you have your speakers set up in a traditional position in your room. The way you describe the narrow listening zone, etc. is a giveaway. Well, there is another sweet spot and how to find it is described on this website in detail. This other sweet spot is not where you expect it to be and you will spend a good deal of time with toe in and toe out, and moving the speakers just a tiny few mm, until it will snap into focus. Also, you must work on the midrange/tweeter, which can be moved separately. For me, I had to adjust them slightly asymmetrically. Now, it is all worth it and I have tape marks on the floor to mark the spots exactly. The soundstage opens up and I can move quite freely and still enjoy excellent three dimensionality. Again the DPOLS is essential for the appreciation of the horn speaker but you will have to experiment to find it.

Adrian
12-29-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
slack key
Hawaii
Posts 5
Joined on 12-28-2011

Post #: 33
Post ID: 17622
Reply to: 17617
Edgarhorns - Spaced out
fiogf49gjkf0d
Lost in Space?  More like Spaced out.
Taking Tramadol and Soma for a cervical problem.  I listened to Art of the Portuguese Fado Guitar and everything was 3D.
Kidding aside, I did some reading yesterday.  Some online articles on the DEQX makes me want to buy one.  Then there are many postings against digital correction devices.  I am glad to hear from Adrian that he tried the DEQX and found it wasn't to his liking.  I too like the horn sound so onwards to educate myself on speaker design and setup and other factors that contribute to what I want to hear. 
For Adrian, have you tried other amps with the Edgarhorns?
I prefer the Cyrus Brenneman KT100's over the Yamamoto 2A3 singles.
Did you do any modifications or redesign on the crossovers?
I had those big military caps replaced with Hovland Musicaps, added bybees, silver wiring.
For the tweeter, I replaced the Fane with JBL 075's.
Midrange is JBL 2441.
Mid-bass is JBL D-131
Seismic Sub is JBL 2241.
 
12-29-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Jorge
Austin TX
Posts 141
Joined on 10-17-2010

Post #: 34
Post ID: 17624
Reply to: 17622
DEQX on horns
fiogf49gjkf0d
I tried a highly modded DEQX on my horns for some time, we did all the time alignment with it, we used 1st order and 4th order xovers and everything in between, we used LeCleach adjustment for bass and all the other drivers we had it sounding for some time untill we got the best sound we could get out of it, mainly following some of the LeCleach setting with different xover points, according to our system,  it sounded fine but something was not right.
One day we had a lot of audipophile friends over and one of them said, I liked it better with the ugly xover: a series xover arragned in a rat nest fashion with battery loaded caps that was gathering dust nearby,  It was quite simple to hook it up:  
Life came back to the system!  Instuments were breathing again, more detail, more dynamics more everything...
Just my experience:
Modded DEQX for sale, balanced to rca cables available!
12-29-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
slack key
Hawaii
Posts 5
Joined on 12-28-2011

Post #: 35
Post ID: 17626
Reply to: 17624
Lesson learned
fiogf49gjkf0d

It is wonderful how these forums work and how it's members provide the feedback and comments from their experiences and expertise.
I am 90% convinced that the DEQX will not provide the magic spatial sound that I am looking for with the Edgarhorns.  If it does to some degree it will probably degrade or even kill the "horn" sound (that disappeared in Jorge's DEQX setup). 
I think it's about time that I check the crossovers in my speakers... to make sure they are correct.  They sound ok to me but may be confusing to someone with keen hearing.  I remember I was told to disconnect a capacitor to the tweeter when I changed from the Fane to JBL 075's.  Does anyone know of a stereo engineer that can propose a schematic crossover design for the drivers that is being used?  Am I making any sense?

12-30-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Bud
upper left crust united snakes
Posts 87
Joined on 07-07-2005

Post #: 36
Post ID: 17627
Reply to: 17626
Crossover crossover rover
fiogf49gjkf0d
You need to find an individual who can design series crossovers. Both JBL and Altec used these, because they sounded best. You will need to look for an individual near where you live because they will have to test the drivers as the design progresses. You can of course utilize a parallel crossover, but a significant improvement in all categories will only come from a full series design. If you lived near Seattle I could put you in touch with a master.

Bud
12-30-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 37
Post ID: 17628
Reply to: 17626
Lesson learned? What Lesson?! Learned what?!
fiogf49gjkf0d

 Bud wrote:
You need to find an individual who can design series crossovers. Both JBL and Altec used these, because they sounded best. You will need to look for an individual near where you live because they will have to test the drivers as the design progresses. You can of course utilize a parallel crossover, but a significant improvement in all categories will only come from a full series design. If you lived near Seattle I could put you in touch with a master.
Bud, be careful with unequivocal advocating of series crossovers. JBL used some series and series/parallel ideas but only in inexpensive and non-ambition speakers. Not to mention that the fact the JBL and Altec used them means nothing.  It is not to say that some of JBL small monitors sound bad but it might or might not have anything to do with series crossovers. The series crossover is a controversial project, it works with one driver and does not work with others and it never was tested with horns. The biggest problem is the “slack key” mind-set to deal with all these subject. You know well that by implanting into his mind the empty phrase “series crossovers” you will open another round of slack’s internet milking. You can implant in his mind with the very same success the phrase “cold nuclear fusion” or “non-proliferation of Asian cypress beetles”

 slack key wrote:
It is wonderful how these forums work and how it's members provide the feedback and comments from their experiences and expertise.
I am 90% convinced that the DEQX will not provide the magic spatial sound that I am looking for with the Edgarhorns.  If it does to some degree it will probably degrade or even kill the "horn" sound (that disappeared in Jorge's DEQX setup). 
I think it's about time that I check the crossovers in my speakers... to make sure they are correct.  They sound ok to me but may be confusing to someone with keen hearing.  I remember I was told to disconnect a capacitor to the tweeter when I changed from the Fane to JBL 075's.  Does anyone know of a stereo engineer that can propose a schematic crossover design for the drivers that is being used?  Am I making any sense?

Sorry, slack but your commentaries sound not like “lesson learned”. Why are your suddenly “90% convinced that the DEQX will not provide the magic spatial sound”? Because somebody in polite manner told you about their own negative experience with this specific brand of digital EQ. What do you know about those people, their playback and cultural objectives, their reference points? Did you asked any questions that would give you indication where they are coming from? Do you understand the reasons why they do not like it? I did not ask you if you rent DEQX for a day in your local pro shop and try it yourself – it would be too much to ask I guess… So, there were two random people who said to you “no-no” and you turned away.  I can give you another 23407 random people from the same internet who adore digital crossover and this playback systems are way more expensive and much “positively reviewed” then what Jorge or Adrian have. The point that I am trying to make is that so far your interest on the subject is so shallow and so artificial that the “lessons you learned” are not the lessons but the empty words that you just heard with your side hearing and for whatever reasons you decided to declare them as your “90% convictions”. I very much do not attack you personally as most of the idiots on internet would think. I just try to separate politeness to a person and a respect to the subject of the person’s interest. I do not defense or assault digital crossovers for you. But I do try to maintain the context at this site at certain level of reasons, the level that I do not see in your inquiry.

Rgs, Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-30-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Jorge
Austin TX
Posts 141
Joined on 10-17-2010

Post #: 38
Post ID: 17630
Reply to: 17628
Xovers
fiogf49gjkf0d
Well a DEQX will cost you less than a set of good caps!  you can buy one and play around with it for a couple of months and see for yourself,  you will have fun anyway and thats what tis all about!  You will need and extra preamp and 3 different amps at least.

I said Series Xover because that is what we were using at the time, we later run more tests with parallel xover with the same xover points and same parts and same system, same drivers same horns and the differences between series and parrallel were small. IMHO.  It would all depend really how you want to run your amps, if your want just one amp for all your system and the impedance is droping too much for that amp, series will help, if you want to run maybe a couple of amps per side, parallel offers much more flexibility.

Designing a xover depends a lot on what drivers you are using, if it is inside a horn, the size and freq. cut off of the horn, what drivers are you crossing to, and ideally what amps will you be using, among a lot of other things, like your taste in music, how thick you like your sound or how detailed, you will find out on the way.  No dont get me wrong or make it personal, but asking somebody to design a xover for your specific system would be like asking somebody to fuck your wife in order to make you a beautiful baby!  And anyway he might just be in it for the fun and never reallly  take your needs in account....
When you buy a whole system, most of the design work has gone onto deciding what drivers to use with what xover points and what parts go into the xover, etc.  And finally it is designed to the designer taste, you might like what he likes or not, a close firend loves the sound of Avalon speakers but he goes for the original designer models only....  pick your poison!
12-30-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
slack key
Hawaii
Posts 5
Joined on 12-28-2011

Post #: 39
Post ID: 17631
Reply to: 17628
Clairvoyance and the psyche
fiogf49gjkf0d
Let's see "series crossovers"... hmmm, very interesting.  Something to look into?  Where can I get more information?  Should I contact an audio tech to design one?  Can I send the current crossovers somewhere for evaluation or do I also have send the speakers and drivers?

Amazing!

Nail on the head.  My mind-set... yes, true what you say and predictable what I do.

I do jump the gun often.  It did cross my mind as to why several professional reviewers liked the DEQX... and for others, it didn't work out.  I tried a Copland TACT when it was offered through Divergent nearly two years ago.  There was better soundstage but the vocals and low level detail (e.g. the resonance of a sax, the lingering decay of the piano, the raspiness of Norah Jones or Cleo Lane) was minimized.    Anyway, the comments that I read in this forum swayed my mind and my conscience to say "90% convinced"... plus the fact that I never received any reply or acknowledgement after sending three emails to DEQX (I also read that others had difficulty getting information from them).... plus the fact that I would feel guilty spending $3k for the DEQX HD Express and software especially when Adrian with the same Edgarhorns, 2A3 amps and DEQX did some extensive trials over many months and concluded that it was not meant to be.  If DEQX offered a 30-day trial, one of the questions that I asked them, I would give it a try and find out for myself it it works for me or not.

Going back to my original inquiry about soundstage and imaging with horn speakers.
I know that speaker position and room acoustics are important.  I use a laser to align the speakers, room treatments, hallographs, crystals, ionizer, Z-sleeves, bybee filters, etc.  I also have power conditioners, installed dedicated electric panel with thick gauge copper wires.  I use high end cables throughout from power to interconnects to speakers.  
I still cannot get the soundstage and imaging that I admire with some systems that I heard at CES and Rocky Mountain. 
At the same time, I don't want to lose the "horn" sound.
Are there some hardware tweaks that I should try?
Simple ones first.
Or is position and acoustic treatment the only way with horn speakers?

 
12-30-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
drdna
San Francisco, California
Posts 526
Joined on 10-29-2005

Post #: 40
Post ID: 17634
Reply to: 17631
EdgarHorn, 2A3, cables, wire, DEQX
fiogf49gjkf0d
 slack key wrote:
I know that speaker position and room acoustics are important.  I use a laser to align the speakers, room treatments, hallographs, crystals, ionizer, Z-sleeves, bybee filters, etc.  I also have power conditioners, installed dedicated electric panel with thick gauge copper wires.  I use high end cables throughout from power to interconnects to speakers.

Marc, I make everything myself, amplifiers, preamp, cables, etc. not because I especially enjoy it, but because what I want is not available. Stop using the laser to align your speakers. Use your ears.

Listening is the only way, because that is the final important result anyway isn't it. Everything else is a tool to help, but the bottom line is the Sound. Don't take what anyone says for gospel, including me, because listening is different for everyone. I have written about this topic a bit in the past if you dig up my old entries.

The simplest changes are sometimes the most profound. I make all my own cables and different cables for the different individual speakers. Here I mean different metal alloys and different gauge widths for each driver became necessary for the EdgarHorn. My experience changing the crossover was that it caused deterioration in the Sound, so I left it alone ultimately. 

The most important thing that will make the biggest difference will be to find DPOLS for your horns. And to do this you must abandon the laser and the measuring tape and trust your self.

Adrian
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