A New Adventure
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Bear> someone just pinged me the other day that 3Dhubs quoted $42 for my waveguide with the SLS nylon process. Did you check that? Far superior to resin IMO.
ET> good to see the ZA14 considered. I was going to recommend it but the Dueland filter wouldn't really work with it, so I didn't mention it. As you can see though, the performance is so good it is hard to pass up because of 2nd order design constraints. I'd like to pair it with the SB21 on my waveguide in a high performance mini-monitor.- Bottom
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So are there really 3 systems in flight here? The 'thrifty' non-Dueland Anarchy/ZA15/DA25 model, the Dueland Anarchy/???/DA25 model and the potential upgrade to the Dueland model using the Accutons? Things move fast at DFAL and it's hard to keep up.
I took some time modeling the Anarchy drivers, and they really are pretty remarkable. Compared to the RSS210HF-4 I'd been considering, dual ported Anarchy gives you significantly more output than 2 sealed Daytons in the same volume (though that's pretty obvious), but surprisingly hangs very well even if you put the Daytons in 3-4 cu ft ported - the Dayton advantages are basically under 30Hz which is of less concern in a music-oriented system. Even if you put it in a conventional cabinet, the 'thrifty' model looks rather promising indeed. Definitely curious as to the mid choice for the Dueland model though, if the rest of the components stay the same - I have been intrigued by the concept since it appeared here (in the Neo-D CC, wasn't it?).- Bottom
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The break-up mode occurs low enough that matching the Dueland transfer function becomes difficult - the break-up becomes somewhat 'in band'. You really need very extended bandwidth to pull off the Dueland topology.- Bottom
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Your lack of faith is disturbing...
There are two sides to this issue....
What combination of tools is the minimum to accomplish the full design intent?
What impact would a simple tower cabinet have on the results, apart from esthetics? (And one should not discount esthetics considering the many decisions in life most people make based largely on that...)
Consider a recent, similar but more challenging project, currently in storage in the outer rim pending a "peace" negotiation with my primary employer (warning: never negotiate with a Sith).
Consider that it was built using a contractor table saw and a hand held circular saw... here you see when the facet detailing was implemented...
As a nomad on the run from the insurgent rebellion, I have very limited tooling resources and space compared with skilled practitioners on the board such as Steve Manning and Renron.... they will tell you that my feeble misguided efforts at woodworking are for the most parts clumsy hacks, and I could hardly disagree with them, much as pride might urge me to do so...
Still, I would argue that the results in the end speak for themselves...
I also promote the concept that a budget BOM does not mean a budget effort... sweat equity is the foundation of DIY.
But on to the other consideration- how much impact would the simpler front panel approach have?
The narrowing of the baffle width will alter the baffle step frequency for the tweeter, there is minimal impact on the midrange driver. But this occurs in a frequency range well outside the operating point of any of the Ardent tweeter crossover concepts, whether the original Duelund or the quasi LR3 concept of the Wavecor Ardent.
A completely conventional tower construction is feasible, but then, I think I can safely say that the effort loses some of the charm and first look impression...
That is up to potential builders to decide upon.
Do note that the tilted back cabinet front does have some other benefits for a system of this height- the midrange to tweeter and woofer integration has a limited vertical window, though broad with the LR3 crossover concept, and aiming it slightly upwards means there are more reverberant reflections from the ceiling, contributing to a slightly more uniform power response. Also, it means that at the listening position seated, one is near the bottom of the integration window, and standing up, one is more likely to still be within the upper limits of that window at any reasonable listening distance.
A reminder, I use the term LR3 only as a way to indicate a 3rd order crossover that is -6dB at the transition frequency for both drivers. There is no such Linkwitz-Riley alignment, of course, and in fact, using conventional measures and evaluation of crossover design, assuming the drivers have acoustic origins at the same distance, it won't work. The NatP and Wavecor Ardent crossovers use the time offset of the midrange and woofer drivers as an integral element of the crossover design, and the design must be matched to the drivers and wavelength distances.DFAL
Dark Force Acoustic Labs
A wholly owned subsidiary of Palpatine Heavy Industries- Bottom
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3rd order crossover -6 dB at transition
And a refresher regarding that crossover concept....
This is the basis for the transfer function of the Modula MT, Natalie P, and the HF crossover of the Isiris and the Wavecor Ardent.DFAL
Dark Force Acoustic Labs
A wholly owned subsidiary of Palpatine Heavy Industries- Bottom
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rsbonini> as mentioned above, the breakup of the ZA14 makes pulling off the 2nd order slopes tough. In my own testing as I got over 2.5khz LR4 an "edge" began to creep in. Now this was a shootout of woofers, all actively crossed to LR4 acoustic response but no special filtering to accommodate breakups. Because of that I never experimented to see if the issue is solvable (linear distortion) or not (non-linear distortion). That might be something ET wants to check for himself since the breakup is easy to notch on this woofer with a small cap across the first inductor. What I can say is if you cross 2.3khz LR4 or lower, it's the cleanest and most musical of the woofers in that test (SB15NRC, Scan Disco, PEerless Nomex, Dayton RS150P). And it sounded pretty much the same at all volumes until the I finally the bottomed the woofer. Impressive.
ET> what is the acoustic center difference for a given XO for that quasi-LR3?- Bottom
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Hey Scott .... What we were looking at by reducing the budget for the drivers, by a considerable amount if all goes well, is allow folks some extra cash to put into the cabinet, or not if you don't want to. If you like the Vimberg look and don't have the desire to do it yourself, sub it out ..... I might know someone by the way. :W The design is also being looked at for the SMJ Audio TTC kits. Of course, as already mentioned, you have the good old tried and true, rectangular box. In other words it gives you more options.- Bottom
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Bear> someone just pinged me the other day that 3Dhubs quoted $42 for my waveguide with the SLS nylon process. Did you check that? Far superior to resin IMO.
ET> good to see the ZA14 considered. I was going to recommend it but the Dueland filter wouldn't really work with it, so I didn't mention it. As you can see though, the performance is so good it is hard to pass up because of 2nd order design constraints. I'd like to pair it with the SB21 on my waveguide in a high performance mini-monitor.
and yet again: thanks for the hard work pulling those together!Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson.- Bottom
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FWIW I'm pretty sure DanP was printing my guides at 100um. You can see the layering along wall, but fine detail is still really good.- Bottom
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Time offset crossovers
rsbonini> as mentioned above, the breakup of the ZA14 makes pulling off the 2nd order slopes tough. In my own testing as I got over 2.5khz LR4 an "edge" began to creep in. Now this was a shootout of woofers, all actively crossed to LR4 acoustic response but no special filtering to accommodate breakups. Because of that I never experimented to see if the issue is solvable (linear distortion) or not (non-linear distortion). That might be something ET wants to check for himself since the breakup is easy to notch on this woofer with a small cap across the first inductor. What I can say is if you cross 2.3khz LR4 or lower, it's the cleanest and most musical of the woofers in that test (SB15NRC, Scan Disco, PEerless Nomex, Dayton RS150P). And it sounded pretty much the same at all volumes until the I finally the bottomed the woofer. Impressive.
ET> what is the acoustic center difference for a given XO for that quasi-LR3?
There is an optimum point, of course, but also some flexibility. The example shown, which is normalized to 1kHz, uses a 50mm offset- this produced the least overall perturbations when tweaked to as reasonably theoretically flat. This can be scaled directly from 1kHz for the chosen crossover frequency.
However, a larger time offset can be used with reasonably similar results, but then the optimization process will resemble "wack a mole" somewhat more, as flattening in one area will produce issues elsewhere. This a schematic assuming a 75mm driver time origin offset.
And the resulting SPL plot.
Now, Hawksford and others have published papers, some in the relatively distant past, about asymmetric crossovers, some using time offsets, most not. This can be thought provoking to research, and has resulted in an experimental concept for a couple of the recently proposed high efficiency/very low distortion design concepts.
An example for an 1800 Hz crossover is shown here....
The result, while not to as tight a tolerance as many might desire, enables high performance with certain physical classes and combinations of drivers...
And has some very interesting characteristics... most interesting...
DFAL
Dark Force Acoustic Labs
A wholly owned subsidiary of Palpatine Heavy Industries- Bottom
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rsbonini> as mentioned above, the breakup of the ZA14 makes pulling off the 2nd order slopes tough. In my own testing as I got over 2.5khz LR4 an "edge" began to creep in. Now this was a shootout of woofers, all actively crossed to LR4 acoustic response but no special filtering to accommodate breakups. Because of that I never experimented to see if the issue is solvable (linear distortion) or not (non-linear distortion). That might be something ET wants to check for himself since the breakup is easy to notch on this woofer with a small cap across the first inductor. What I can say is if you cross 2.3khz LR4 or lower, it's the cleanest and most musical of the woofers in that test (SB15NRC, Scan Disco, PEerless Nomex, Dayton RS150P). And it sounded pretty much the same at all volumes until the I finally the bottomed the woofer. Impressive.
This is what I would expect based on the measurements. Considering the dispersion characteristics, crossing higher than your suggestion would also be preferred, and notching break up modes is in my DNA, as one can see from the NatalieP.DFAL
Dark Force Acoustic Labs
A wholly owned subsidiary of Palpatine Heavy Industries- Bottom
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I just got back the SLS print. It's much better than my prior PETG prints, though I still prefer the Resin overall (smoother, more of a matte finish).Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson.- Bottom
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There is an optimum point, of course, but also some flexibility. The example shown, which is normalized to 1kHz, uses a 50mm offset- this produced the least overall perturbations when tweaked to as reasonably theoretically flat. This can be scaled directly from 1kHz for the chosen crossover frequency.
However, a larger time offset can be used with reasonably similar results, but then the optimization process will resemble "wack a mole" somewhat more, as flattening in one area will produce issues elsewhere. This a schematic assuming a 75mm driver time origin offset.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]29759[/ATTACH]
And the resulting SPL plot.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]29760[/ATTACH]
Now, Hawksford and others have published papers, some in the relatively distant past, about asymmetric crossovers, some using time offsets, most not. This can be thought provoking to research, and has resulted in an experimental concept for a couple of the recently proposed high efficiency/very low distortion design concepts.
An example for an 1800 Hz crossover is shown here....
[ATTACH=CONFIG]29761[/ATTACH]
The result, while not to as tight a tolerance as many might desire, enables high performance with certain physical classes and combinations of drivers...
[ATTACH=CONFIG]29762[/ATTACH]
And has some very interesting characteristics... most interesting...
[ATTACH=CONFIG]29763[/ATTACH]
I’m using two Dayton audio woofers and a seas tweeter with a diy wood conical lens
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk- Bottom
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A practical two way example- the NatlieP
This approach can probably be easily adapted to your requirements.
Do understand that the presented crossovers above are for "ideal" flat drivers to show electrical filter and time domain behavior, and do not include alterations necessary for baffle step compensation, driver equalization, and dealing with breakup modes.
For example, a practical realized filter using this approach was first developed for the NatlieP project, which was a two way system using Dayton RS180 and RS28a tweeter. Because of some "interesting" side benefits to the technique, I also made it a series crossover configuration, as some parts then do double duty.
Many are not used to the type of Dark side thinking necessary to intuitively envision the operation in this mode, and it was most amusing seeing them try...
Note that this system design dates back to 2005... we were all much younger then. I have had many requests for updates on this design, but now with the Peerless DA25 tweeter I have good reason to potentially revisit it- either with the same RS180 or another LF driver, pending further driver investigations.
If you are familiar with the overall steps needed to get data and arrive at a useful design, I won't recount them here- if not, let us know and I can outline the process, and possibly assist.DFAL
Dark Force Acoustic Labs
A wholly owned subsidiary of Palpatine Heavy Industries- Bottom
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I’ll post the models and specs of the drivers when I have some time
Great work you’re doing
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk- Bottom
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Thank you Jon for educational material too. Interesting reading as always and a great idea to play these things through with ideal drivers. I for one should be doing that some more.
For me, beside the Xover tuning for the slope and summing etc is to get the 'home made in room' measurements conditioned so that I can trust the low frequency part below 1k. Not having too big a room and especially ceiling thats only 5.2m/8.1feet will limit the useful gating window too much. I've yet to come up with a good solution, but for now the best approach seems to be either to
a) merge the short gated response and a long about 80ms gated and strongly smoothed response together with Merger ... leaves still very visible room modes and floor reflection into the response
b) merge a short gated response and a near field response + baffle simulation together - makes a much smoother low end. I do verify that against the long gated one still to try to eyeball the reasonable match.
For 2 ways it's been working reasonably well, but now with latest OLA 2.5way design where woofers share the box, but later have a different Xover - there I've struggled a lot to get it right. The speakers are now finally at my friends place where they belong in the end. He's still tuning them even though we have gone through many physical Xover revisions already. I should just go the route Zvu presented in the other thread and rent a 'basketball court' and do it once and right
Anyhow, open to hearing your design flow and methods of tackling that aspect... or maybe you do not obsess that much about it at all in end and tune the low end by listening ?- Bottom
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I have to concur with the sentiment expressed above about the ZA14 - it has the cleanest midrange I have heard in my admittedly limited experience. I really think it's overlooked by many, I'm not sure if it's the cost, the looks, or limited distribution. In a way it's much like the Peerless tweeter; folks often seem to relegate them to budget builds when their performance is anything but.
In terms of the woofers used for this project; is the anarchy going to be it for sure? I ask because it seems to be even more limited in availability than the ZA14; at least madisound will ship internationally. I wonder if it might be possible to have an option using the Wavecor sw182bd02 - I understand it's very close to the anarchy woofer, only with an aluminum cone and wavecor motor instead. A pair of them models nicely in a moderate sized ported tower tuned low, something I've been eyeing lately.- Bottom
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The Anarchy has a black aluminum cone as well, so materials are not different.
Which Peerless tweeter? DQ25 (relevant to ZA14 discussions)? If that is the one you refer to, I find it to be a pretty cheap sounding junk driver and don't like the broadband glare it emits. Other Peerless tweeters are great, like the Corundum TX line.
Different strokes for different folks.
Later,
Wolf- Bottom
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The Anarchy has a black aluminum cone as well, so materials are not different.
Which Peerless tweeter? DQ25 (relevant to ZA14 discussions)? If that is the one you refer to, I find it to be a pretty cheap sounding junk driver and don't like the broadband glare it emits. Other Peerless tweeters are great, like the Corundum TX line.
Different strokes for different folks.
Later,
Wolf
Didn't realize the anarchy had an aluminum cone as well, for whatever reason I tend to conflate it with the old extremis. I just remember reading Rick Craig somewhere saying they were essentially the same drivers as the Wavecors with different motors. I don't know how much (if at all) better the xbl^2 motor is than the wavecor 'balanced drive' motor, but if they're comparable it could give the design more longevity and wider appeal.- Bottom
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I have to concur with the sentiment expressed above about the ZA14 - it has the cleanest midrange I have heard in my admittedly limited experience. I really think it's overlooked by many, I'm not sure if it's the cost, the looks, or limited distribution. In a way it's much like the Peerless tweeter; folks often seem to relegate them to budget builds when their performance is anything but.
In terms of the woofers used for this project; is the anarchy going to be it for sure? I ask because it seems to be even more limited in availability than the ZA14; at least madisound will ship internationally. I wonder if it might be possible to have an option using the Wavecor sw182bd02 - I understand it's very close to the anarchy woofer, only with an aluminum cone and wavecor motor instead. A pair of them models nicely in a moderate sized ported tower tuned low, something I've been eyeing lately.
At this time, the sw182bd02 is not available from the US distributor. Solen in Canada has 4 pieces, priced at close out pricing, and with no backorders allowed. The normal MSRP for this driver is about $160 USD, but it seems to not really be available on an ongoing basis anymore.
There are composite glass fiber and paper versions, and paper cone versions, but they are have pronounced disturbances in the 1 - 1.5 kHz area response and the impedance curve which, for me, render them less desirable. The do not approach the linearity of behavior of the SW223BD02. And the pricing is close to 3X that of the Anarchy Exodus. While I am reasonably certain the design could probably be adapted to the Wavecor 182 series, provided sufficient motivation, at this time, that motivation does not seem to exist.
This is a special project for Steve Mannings “New Adventure” and the overall parameters require ruthless examination and implementation of all reasonable requirements. Perhaps, the unreasonable ones, too... Reducing the driver BOM cost by 85% is not a trivial undertaking... while targeting maintaining a demonstrably high degree of linear and non-linear performance.
I wholly agree with comments about the ZA14 being an over looked part. There is also one other type just ordred yesterday which may- or may not- give it some competition.DFAL
Dark Force Acoustic Labs
A wholly owned subsidiary of Palpatine Heavy Industries- Bottom
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Thank you Jon for educational material too. Interesting reading as always and a great idea to play these things through with ideal drivers. I for one should be doing that some more.
For me, beside the Xover tuning for the slope and summing etc is to get the 'home made in room' measurements conditioned so that I can trust the low frequency part below 1k. Not having too big a room and especially ceiling thats only 5.2m/8.1feet will limit the useful gating window too much. I've yet to come up with a good solution, but for now the best approach seems to be either to
a) merge the short gated response and a long about 80ms gated and strongly smoothed response together with Merger ... leaves still very visible room modes and floor reflection into the response
b) merge a short gated response and a near field response + baffle simulation together - makes a much smoother low end. I do verify that against the long gated one still to try to eyeball the reasonable match.
For 2 ways it's been working reasonably well, but now with latest OLA 2.5way design where woofers share the box, but later have a different Xover - there I've struggled a lot to get it right. The speakers are now finally at my friends place where they belong in the end. He's still tuning them even though we have gone through many physical Xover revisions already. I should just go the route Zvu presented in the other thread and rent a 'basketball court' and do it once and right
Anyhow, open to hearing your design flow and methods of tackling that aspect... or maybe you do not obsess that much about it at all in end and tune the low end by listening ?
Your questions are very valid, and yes, it might be interesting to do a complete discussion of current design flows in a separate thread- time constraint may delay that until December.
Anyhow, open to hearing your design flow and methods of tackling that aspect... or maybe you do not obsess that much about it at all in end and tune the low end by listening?
In my own situation, there are several "design studies" begun this year, for specific applications and sets of drivers which, regrettably, due to the press of any obligations and tasks for the Empire, must be temporarily set aside and put in abeyance. Or, specifically, in storage in the Outer Rim, where I plan to relocate in about 14 months.
I would offer one axiom, about design flow- there is not one "correct" design flow, but there are many "incomplete" or vulnerable design flows, which might leave important characteristics to chance. And there are some which could be labeled fatally flawed, too.... There has been a clear evolution of understanding on this topic on this and other boards over the last 15 years... at times interesting, most interesting....DFAL
Dark Force Acoustic Labs
A wholly owned subsidiary of Palpatine Heavy Industries- Bottom
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It might be a cost thing, but I prefer the ceramic model to the aluminum. The sound is IMO unquantifiably better.
Later,
Wolf- Bottom
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That one is in the same shipment, but Steve has expressed a preference for the black cone material, and this is targeting the lowest feasible cost without sacrificing performance. But your input is duly noted and sets a specific target comparison for the planned listening tests.
How would you describe what the differences in sound are, and have you measured and correlated it to specific performance characteristics?
Unquantifiably better sounds as if you find that you prefer it, but you cannot quantify why- these situations arise, but generally they both merit and require more detailed investigation.DFAL
Dark Force Acoustic Labs
A wholly owned subsidiary of Palpatine Heavy Industries- Bottom
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Some files obtained by Bothan spies are being transmitted to the head of TIE Industries now.Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson.- Bottom
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This is a reasonable suggestion on your part, but I do not believe the availability question is clear cut.
At this time, the sw182bd02 is not available from the US distributor. Solen in Canada has 4 pieces, priced at close out pricing, and with no backorders allowed. The normal MSRP for this driver is about $160 USD, but it seems to not really be available on an ongoing basis anymore.- Bottom
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Whilst knowing full well that this will elicit a remote Force Choke, the Khyber Lenses from the Professional Augurer (disguised as a simple person who makes holes for pay) might make a combination with the 26ADC model from the Sinar Baja system a worthy competitor to the Corundum conundrum. I believe that his model A.625 will offer an effective weapon against both the forces of "CTC" and those whose efforts seek to disturb the alignment of phase compared to the most worthy current champion of Coruscant.
Some files obtained by Bothan spies are being transmitted to the head of TIE Industries now.
I can also easily design something proprietary and just send an .stl or .step file. ET, IIRC the faceplate cannot be removed because the diaphragm is glued to it, correct?- Bottom
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More or less, I was saying they weren't my project or usage, and that someone else did the design. I heard the 2 versions of the Bromo kit from SB Acoustics, one withe black aluminum and one with ceramics. Both use the same xover network. I preferred the detail of the ceramic design and how more refined it sounded.
I know more people were also in agreement of one over the other, typically of the same opinion. We got to hear both in succession at the CSS/Meniscus DIY in September.
Unquantifiable as I can't quantify my findings since I don't have them myself,
Wolf- Bottom
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Very similar concept:
Ja, das Design kommt Ihnen bekannt vor. Richtig, von den großen Isophon-Boxen. Aber was ist dann das hier?
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Very similar concept:
Ja, das Design kommt Ihnen bekannt vor. Richtig, von den großen Isophon-Boxen. Aber was ist dann das hier?
https://www.hifitest.de/test/lautspr...lina_rc11_8508- Bottom
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Very similar concept:
Ja, das Design kommt Ihnen bekannt vor. Richtig, von den großen Isophon-Boxen. Aber was ist dann das hier?
https://www.hifitest.de/test/lautspr...lina_rc11_8508
It is not the type of construction technique available to a home builder, yet with the proper execution it bypasses the issues common to DIY translam designs- something Steve and others on the board have frustrating experience with. It uses components in their most optimum mode, under compression, considering the pluses and minuses of available materials....DFAL
Dark Force Acoustic Labs
A wholly owned subsidiary of Palpatine Heavy Industries- Bottom
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i drove down to Steve's house this weekend to listen to the new adventure project. Steve gave me a tour of the workshop and a listening session. After the listening session I was sold, I knew I wanted a pair! The beauty is that I can still have some part in the process by getting to paint and assemble. The sound was amazing along with the high wife approval factor design, and I like them better then the wharfdales I'm using now. Needless to say I'm extremely excited to get a pair of these, and to see what John and Steve are creating for the HT design. Great work Steve and John on this project!
SvenPainter in training- Bottom
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Thank you Sven .... very kind of you to say.- Bottom
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Website ....
Well that long overdue website I mentioned a while back is finally up ........ http://www.smjaudio.com/- Bottom
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Congrats on getting the website up. I hope with all the "sit at home" policies around the globe it will help drum up some new business as people have more time to dream and browse the web.
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Just a tiny typo that I noticed - on a page
the image description is "Modular MTM" while I believe the original name is "Modula MTM"
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Congrats on getting the website up. I hope with all the "sit at home" policies around the globe it will help drum up some new business as people have more time to dream and browse the web.
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Just a tiny typo that I noticed - on a page
the image description is "Modular MTM" while I believe the original name is "Modula MTM"
https://www.htguide.com/forum/showth...uction-Details- Bottom
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New Baffle Option
Just to let folks know, early tests on an actually 3D sculpted baffle looks rather promising. This has been on my list of things to figure out and was prompted by on going work into center channel designs by Jon.
Here are some pictures from the test run. This is essentially the same size baffle as what's on the Calliope MT.
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