Hey Chris,That's unfortunate that you've chosen to not hear a good setup with something like K-402s, etc. I think you would immediately change your mind.
I have not 'chosen' to exclude the K-402s. Those have simply not been on my radar and I evolved my horn experimentation from a different angle, more like TAD and Altec side. My general experience with modern CD or 'shallow' horns (call them as you like) has not been great. Very early on I came to the realization that the choices in horns/driver combos are few and far in between. These things don't grow on trees either but after this discussion I feel I should give the K402 a listen. I hope I get a chance to hear them in may at the show.
best
I think that's a good outcome of the discussion, if nothing else. Thanks.but after this discussion I feel I should give the K402 a listen. I hope I get a chance to hear them in may at the show.
Be careful of listening at trade shows, however. I've found that often times, the setups aren't terribly good. Asking to see the in-room measurements for the room/loudspeaker might be a way of better understanding of how well they've been set up.
You might have noticed that I put a lot of emphasis on the room acoustics and how well they've been dialed in. I guess it isn't difficult to see that as the acoustic performance levels generally keep increasing over time, the more the room and dial-ins become important to sound quality. When I started out with first gen. Jubilees in December 2007 in my listening room, there was before me an extremely long path toward realizing their real potential that basically culminated in April 2019 in terms of a lot of added domain knowledge and insights. That's why I have become very sensitive to showroom dial-ins. It's also why I try to share my experiences--to help others avoid that extremely long learning curve.
Chris
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to return to the original subject of the thread . the new Faital HF1460 with carbon diagram seems the one to beat in mesure , the respons , distorsions and watefall are hard to believe .. wondering if someone had listen to them ?
Hi Snickers-is,
Kindest regards,
M
Could you please provide a reference supporting your claim?At high frequencies we typically get a lot of rotating modes in the phase plug which leads to large changes in the wavefront shape. When the wavelengths are tiny, these changes are significant and the horn can not propagate these distorted wavefronts and reshape them as intended. This results in lack of high end energy, consistency and dispersion.
Kindest regards,
M
The 1.4 mouth has stopped me from trying. Is yet another size I have no horn flare for and frankly the Faital or Eminence horns do not impress me much. Since no one has made dome twitters, I am speculating but this material may perform best between 500-1500Hz. Not sure how similar this is to the material I have seen used in cones.to return to the original subject of the thread . the new Faital HF1460 with carbon diagram seems the one to beat in mesure , the respons , distorsions and watefall are hard to believe .. wondering if someone had listen to them ?
Notice the 2HD is 45 DB down from a 120DB fundamental. Kind of good considering the 120DB thing.
Thanks for asking. My experience with multis and drivers isn't too extensive, but I have owned and/or listened to the metal 1505, wooden replica 1505, 1005, tar filled 1005, 803, 203. Here is a list of drivers I remember ranked in order of preference.Pano, which compression drivers do you like on your multicells? Serious question here, no joking around.
- Westrex 2080 Alnico
- BMS 4592 Nd
- Altec 288 Alnico
- Altec 288 ferrite
- Altec 291 Ferrite
- Altec 290 Alnico with phenolic diaphragm
- Radian 4735 ferrite
The Westrex 2080 is said to the the British equivalent of the USA 288, but it does not look or sound like the 288 to me. It looks more like the WE 555 and sounds like heaven. I don't know what it is about this driver, but I've never used anything as good, nothing else as right sounding.
This summer I'd like to try the TexTreme Eminence drivers in place of the BMS, I hope that will happen. However I'm not sure if they will survive my lower crossover point. Eminence recommend a high pass at 800Hz second order. I'm currently at 499Hz 4th order Linkwitz-Riley, which puts almost 2X the power into the driver in the 500-650Hz range. I'll have to carefully measure how much voltage I'm sending out in that range.
Hi Snickers-is,
Could you please provide a reference supporting your claim?
Kindest regards,
M
Sure:
But why do you need me to "support my claim", I thought this was sufficiently common knowledge at this point?
EDIT: On page 674, this topic is described in detail. One can also find this type of distortion thorougly examined by Mr @jackocleebrown in this video where he talks about how the AXI2050 came to life:
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Thanks for the posting that. But I'm curious about the exit angle. The spec sheet says:he new Faital HF1460 with carbon diagram seems the one to beat
Exit Angle (5) Cylindrical | |
Conical or cylindrical?
Hi Snickers-is,
Well, perhaps it is a common knowledge, but I have not seen it anywhere, e.g., Hendrickson paper, Geddes' patent.
Kindest regards,
M
thank you for the reference. My friend has, in fact, the book, so I will borrow it.But why do you need me to "support my claim", I thought this was sufficiently common knowledge at this point?
Well, perhaps it is a common knowledge, but I have not seen it anywhere, e.g., Hendrickson paper, Geddes' patent.
Kindest regards,
M
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I can recommend that book, but it is kind of a heavy one in more than one way. But it lead me to develop this 460x400mm horn:
Horizontal:
Vertical:
It is powered by a 18s 1480Be, and it is clear by the simulations that what happens around 14-16k is related to the wavefront coming out of the phase plug.
I therefore started work on a compression driver that solves this issue. It is a carbon ring radiator with a 3D printed phase plug.
Horizontal:
Vertical:
It is powered by a 18s 1480Be, and it is clear by the simulations that what happens around 14-16k is related to the wavefront coming out of the phase plug.
I therefore started work on a compression driver that solves this issue. It is a carbon ring radiator with a 3D printed phase plug.
It looks like this in case anyone is curious:
Hi Snickers-is,
How did you make the horn - 3D printing? How deep is it?
Kindest regards,
M
ROTFLMAO. I know, when I visited last time, I had hard time to pick it up. 🙂I can recommend that book, but it is kind of a heavy one in more than one way.
How did you make the horn - 3D printing? How deep is it?
Kindest regards,
M
Hi @Snickers-is,
That looks really interesting, so you’re making it into a commercial product?
Die-casting it in what material?
That looks really interesting, so you’re making it into a commercial product?
Die-casting it in what material?
Yes I am.
You can read about BMC here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulk_moulding_compound
The result is a hard, stiff and heavy material that allows for significantly thicker walls than what is common for injection moulding.
You can read about BMC here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulk_moulding_compound
The result is a hard, stiff and heavy material that allows for significantly thicker walls than what is common for injection moulding.
Yes, the book is actually too heavy to keep in your lap for more than fifteen minutes, and hand-holding is out of the question for more than a couple of minutes. It has to go on a book table in order to read it without wrist fatigue.
If it was printed as TWO books they would still be pretty big, and not trade paperbacks by any means.
If it was printed as TWO books they would still be pretty big, and not trade paperbacks by any means.
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