
To those who aren't familiar with, the Dream Maker is a fairly high-efficiency, tube-friendly bipolar speaker that I showed at RMAF in 2007 and at the Lone Star Audio Fest earlier this year. It subsequently received a 2008 Golden Ear Award from Robert Greene of The Absolute Sound. He was later asked why he saw fit to give that award, and here is part of his reply:
"They have a really impressive ability to interact with the listening room correctly. (This is a speaker where DSP correction is all but irrelevant for instance--almost nothing happens--and there are few of those around, I assure you).
"I think the wavegide idea is a good one and this seemed to me a particularly convincing instance. The speaker also strikes me as a bargain [$9000 a pair]. In a world where people are paying more than twice its price for minimonitors, here is a speaker with real bottom end extension, full range sound, real scope and dynamics, for a rational price."
Here's the link:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/regsaudioforum/message/23243Here's the page from my website with specs and a description of the Dream Makers:
http://www.audiokinesis.com/akspeakers.htmHere's my thread explaining the theory behind the Dream Maker's design:
http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=56877.0This is the speaker that Lynn Olson liked best at RMAF '07. He didn't come to my room in '08.
So anyway with the present economic slowdown, I'd like to re-invest what I have presently tied up in enclosures and drivers for the Dream Maker. Therefore, I'm offering the parts in kit form at a couple hundred dollars over my cost (and of course much less than retail cost).
Here's what the kit would include, for $5,000 plus shipping:
- Two Maple Dream Maker enclosures, some minor work required smoothing the finish along the edges, drilling screw holes, and installing constrained-layer-damping panels.
- Internal acoustic damping panels and instructions on how to apply them.
- Four TAD TL-1102 alnico magnet woofers, which are now "unobtainium".
- Four Beyma CP-385Nd polyester-diaphragm compression drivers.
- Four DDS ENG 1-90 waveguides, hand-grinded so they fit into the cabinets, and so the drivers can be mounted, along with foam for making the mounting gasket. Damping material applied to the waveguides so they don't ring.
- Instructions on how to mount the compression driver to the waveguide so that you get a smooth transition.
- Two input terminal cups, and two tweeter-level resistor terminal cup.
- Four 3" diameter Precision Ports.
- Crossover parts list and schematic. You can improve on the original by using hotrod crossover parts that were not practical for me to use. Thie crossover is really the heart and soul of my design.
- Four crossover mounting boards, two for each speaker.
- Two plywood shipping crates for the enclosures; the rest ships in cardboard boxes. If you live close enough I'll deliver 'em without the crates, and we'll adjust the price accordingly.
I can do some of the work myself, if you would like, for additional fees.
I will ask that you keep the crossover design confidential. You see, the day may well come when the economy is booming again and a virtual drop-in replacement for the TAD woofer is readily available, in which case I may want to start cranking 'em out without it being easy for someone to copy my design.
Let me know if you have any questions, and thanks for taking a look.
Duke
audiokinesis at yahoo dot com