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4 A.M. on Sunday morning [message #52380] Sun, 27 July 2008 05:44 Go to next message
Bill Epstein is currently offline  Bill Epstein
Messages: 1088
Registered: May 2009
Location: Smoky Mts. USA
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
Talking Heads Live.

A great way to break in the 6.8 and 22 uF Obbligato oilers. Love the way that 22 looks: Tower of Power.

The Mills for R1 and R2 arrived yesterday.

Re: 4 A.M. on Sunday morning [message #52381 is a reply to message #52380] Sun, 27 July 2008 23:34 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18784
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

"Burning Down the House!"

How's it sounding?


Re: 4 A.M. on Sunday morning [message #52382 is a reply to message #52381] Mon, 28 July 2008 00:36 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Bill Epstein is currently offline  Bill Epstein
Messages: 1088
Registered: May 2009
Location: Smoky Mts. USA
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
I can't listen to "You might find yourself" without a vision of Nick Nolte and that little dog going through a dumpster.

Sound? Incredible. Aside from playing with the grand daughter, I spent most of the day dialing in the VTF on the Sonata which banished the well-known Grado sibilance then tackled speaker placement. Couldn't ever get a center image in this room so I went back to basics and set up the Cardas Golden mean, moving them closer together and farther out from the front (George calls it the back) wall. Bingo! Almost as good as outdoors.

I can't sit 62" away from them for some reason but as you push your chair farther back, the image remains stable.

Aside from a few nits, more attack than decay and little depth to the image, this is by far the best sound I've had from my own system.

Re: 4 A.M. on Sunday morning [message #52384 is a reply to message #52382] Mon, 28 July 2008 01:35 Go to previous message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18784
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

That's good to hear, Bill. Glad it is sounding good to you.

My experience mirrors yours. It's a smoother sounding speaker. Not light and day smoother, subtle but enough to notice. But just like any other change like that, once you go forward going back becomes pretty noticeable.

The first thing I did in this latest incremental upgrade was to go through the speaker with the S&L system and see what I could see, with the idea that if I found anything worth upgrading, I would. There was a little more peaking at the crossover frequency than I wanted, so the underdamping from R1/R2/C1 was working well but could stand to be reduced just a smidge. That's why I reduced the 8.2uF capacitor to 6.8uF. It makes the midrange and overtones smoother, silky smooth with the DE250 and 2226.

The second thing I noticed was the null angles with the 2nd/3rd crossover were shifted up so that the bottom null was just below the forward axis and the upper one was way up over your head. The forward axis wasn't straight forward. This crossover was done purely with calculations and math models. It was pretty good, but with better visibility could be improved so I did. What results is a much better speaker, with a more usable pattern. The 1st/3rd network required the woofer polarity to be swapped, which worked pretty well, but here again, the 3rd/3rd network with staggered crossover points worked better.

With this new network, summing is constructive through a wide 90° horizontal arc and about a 50° vertical arc. Within this range, the response is very smooth. Outside this range, response doesn't get wildly peaky like some other speakers, rather, it has a smooth graceful rolloff at HF. In particular, the troublesome vertical angles are well-behaved, with limited HF at large vertical angles to reduce reflections off the floors and ceiling. It does everything I want it to do.

The speaker was designed to specs, which is how I always work. I always design "by the numbers" rather than voicing a speaker by ear. If I were to find a speaker sounded bad when the design looked like it should sound good, I'd go back to the drawing board to see what I missed. But by using good components and an implementation that works, I've always found that to be a winning combination that gives good sound. This case was no exception - after setting up everything for smoothest response through the 90x40 coverage angle, the end result was a very natural sounding speaker. To me, it just melts in the room, just exactly what I want my speakers to do.

You know, your title for this thread reminds me of an old Simon and Garfunkel album.


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