dual concentrics? where can i get some?

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When it comes to speakers Tannoy (now part of TC Group) owns the trademark for 'dualconcentric' since 1947 when they released the first one. No other speaker or driver manufacturer is allowed to use that term for their drivers.

Yes. Accepted. however in linguistic terms the word can be applied just as well.
since im not going to build a co axial, and call it dual concentric, TM hardly bothers me. 😀

however youve brought a fair point. Maybe other 'not strictly dual concentrics' by other manufacturers would be found, if i googled 'co-axial' instead....hmmmmmm🙄

the only tannoys ive seen so far i like the general size etc are cms501 and cms501dc

Ive got no idea if theyre any good though? has anyone got any experience of these things?
 
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Yes. Accepted. however in linguistic terms the word can be applied just as well.
since im not going to build a co axial, and call it dual concentric, TM hardly bothers me. 😀

however youve brought a fair point. Maybe other 'not strictly dual concentrics' by other manufacturers would be found, if i googled 'co-axial' instead....hmmmmmm🙄

the only tannoys ive seen so far i like the general size etc are cms501 and cms501dc

Ive got no idea if theyre any good though? has anyone got any experience of these things?

Almost all manufacturers of pro drivers I had a look at makes co-axials of some sort.

Can't say much about CMS501s, classic 10" are the smallest I ever considered and 12" 3149s are the ones I ended up buying… twice.
 
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I once asked, some graphs in Beyma's datasheets look too good to be true, then someone answered that Beyma is quite honest... No?

Look into the 6CX200Nd mentioned above, the HF section does have a dip/peak around 2.5k ~ 3kHz or so, that's approaching 20dB in total ! 90dB@ 2.5k -- 108dB@ 3k.

On other graphs, it looks +/- 5dB in most of it's operating range.
 
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