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Thanks for the reply. I can't believe that the beak is around $100 /pair at the dealer.
The Beak was developed to control parasitic vibrations that occur on top of a speaker cabinet. These resonances negatively impact speaker performance, specifically the lobbing action in tweeters. Placing a Beak on any speaker helps to control vibration, provides and reduces interaction between speaker, tweeter and enclosure. Much thought and a year of research were poured into the development of the Beak. Its precisely defined contour was carefully designed and requires extremely accurate fabrication. If any of its properties were altered, it would impact the flux created within and render the unit ineffectiveThe ShapeThe Beak is precision milled in a strictly prescribed form. The shape controls cabinet resonance ad vibration. The Beak acts as a channel for these vibrations , moving through its cavity to the discharge point on top. Like the beak on a bird or whale channels sound, this Beak channels the negative effects of cabinet vibration. Hence its shape and name.PlacementThe placement of the Totem Acoustic 'Beak' on a smaller speaker is usually towards the outer front or rear corner of a speaker. Fine tuning the location through experimentation is the key to find the best location to maximize imaging, extension, and musical impression. A pair of Beaks can be used on each speaker for improved results.$100.00pr
Mike, biwire and forget about the Monster jumpers, you should get the same sort of cable for jumpers as you use to connect the speakers to the amps. If you go crazy, you can see how some people splice up the ends of the cables and make them into biwires. that is if the cables do not have a crazy design. or at the very least get a piece of cable and make your own jumpers between the binders. Experiment wiring your speakers either from the top set up binders or the bottom, to see what you like the best.