If I was to boil it down to the essence, the M8ta is about finesse and extension in a two way- I tried to distill all the things I liked about the Avalon Eclipse and Arcus, and fix or improve some of the things I didn't like.
Compared with the M8 booskshelf design as publisehd in AudioXpress, the M8ta goes almost an octave deeper in the bass, while maintaining the ability to hit maximum output levels of about 100 dB. There are limits to what you can expect for a two way, of course, and when you push it, IMD and THD will suffer compared with a no holds barred large system. The intent was to come up with a modest footprint speaker with with reasonably low cabinet and driver coloration, and hit a numer of targets with regards to consistency of power response throghout the frequency range, very uniform off axis response, and a wide vertical window, with good playback at 90-96 dB levels from the low 20's up. Without a sub. I'm expecting that the Dayton RS225 will allow expanding the envelope slightly, and reduce distortion 5-6 dB. Not a breakthrough, but a worthwhile incremental improvement.
They aren't high output speakers- certainly, the MTMs setup properly can do better. To achieve comparable bandwidth, the MTM's would need a cabinet of about 120 liters. Not small at all, but that's life, folks. Hoffman's iron law is Hoffman's iron law. A 120 liter MTM tower will extend the dynamic range, or put things more at ease in lower SPL areas. The smaller sealed version, when used with a sub, has a pretty reasonable dynamic range overall. The midrange is more at ease, if you get the low frequencies out of the midwoofer. No surprise there.
Now, one could do a version of the M8ta without the fancy cabinet work- just a straight ahead tower, and it wouldn't be that hard to build, nor the cost all that high, depending on the tweeter choice. But the more expensive tweeters really do buy you something in the top end.
Another variant that would be fun to do would be an MTM version with the 7" Daytons, and then a single TC2+ in it's own cabinet. Or two, if you really want to shake the walls down. The 7's would have to be wired in series if it was only a single TC2+. With the 7's, the crossover could be moved up to ~2 kHz. The midwoofer crossover could be around 125 or so. Of course, what you've got there, is basically an X1 SLAMM, but not as high efficiency, but possibly with better distortion numbers, as the Focal woofers used in the X1 didn't have much Xmax. That system would play loud. Quite loud. Tuning the driver balance without an active crossover might be a little tricky. In fact, I have played with the MkIII and MkIV two way on the X1 bass cabinets, with the electronic crossover system I built for my X1 Klones; that combo worked pretty nicely. The Vifa tweeter was getting stressed before anything else.
It's an interesting idea, but one I'm not likely to build in the near future- got too many other things going on, like the Arvo's and Saint-Saens. The funny thing is that, excepting the Saint-Saen, all of these other system ideas are just variations on a theme, descended from the original Mk IV bookshelf two way published in AudioXpress. I'm not being very orginal, am I?
The "data dump" is on it's way to you, Andrew.
Best regards,
Jon
Compared with the M8 booskshelf design as publisehd in AudioXpress, the M8ta goes almost an octave deeper in the bass, while maintaining the ability to hit maximum output levels of about 100 dB. There are limits to what you can expect for a two way, of course, and when you push it, IMD and THD will suffer compared with a no holds barred large system. The intent was to come up with a modest footprint speaker with with reasonably low cabinet and driver coloration, and hit a numer of targets with regards to consistency of power response throghout the frequency range, very uniform off axis response, and a wide vertical window, with good playback at 90-96 dB levels from the low 20's up. Without a sub. I'm expecting that the Dayton RS225 will allow expanding the envelope slightly, and reduce distortion 5-6 dB. Not a breakthrough, but a worthwhile incremental improvement.
They aren't high output speakers- certainly, the MTMs setup properly can do better. To achieve comparable bandwidth, the MTM's would need a cabinet of about 120 liters. Not small at all, but that's life, folks. Hoffman's iron law is Hoffman's iron law. A 120 liter MTM tower will extend the dynamic range, or put things more at ease in lower SPL areas. The smaller sealed version, when used with a sub, has a pretty reasonable dynamic range overall. The midrange is more at ease, if you get the low frequencies out of the midwoofer. No surprise there.
Now, one could do a version of the M8ta without the fancy cabinet work- just a straight ahead tower, and it wouldn't be that hard to build, nor the cost all that high, depending on the tweeter choice. But the more expensive tweeters really do buy you something in the top end.
Another variant that would be fun to do would be an MTM version with the 7" Daytons, and then a single TC2+ in it's own cabinet. Or two, if you really want to shake the walls down. The 7's would have to be wired in series if it was only a single TC2+. With the 7's, the crossover could be moved up to ~2 kHz. The midwoofer crossover could be around 125 or so. Of course, what you've got there, is basically an X1 SLAMM, but not as high efficiency, but possibly with better distortion numbers, as the Focal woofers used in the X1 didn't have much Xmax. That system would play loud. Quite loud. Tuning the driver balance without an active crossover might be a little tricky. In fact, I have played with the MkIII and MkIV two way on the X1 bass cabinets, with the electronic crossover system I built for my X1 Klones; that combo worked pretty nicely. The Vifa tweeter was getting stressed before anything else.
It's an interesting idea, but one I'm not likely to build in the near future- got too many other things going on, like the Arvo's and Saint-Saens. The funny thing is that, excepting the Saint-Saen, all of these other system ideas are just variations on a theme, descended from the original Mk IV bookshelf two way published in AudioXpress. I'm not being very orginal, am I?

The "data dump" is on it's way to you, Andrew.
Best regards,
Jon


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