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Thanks for the review.
Neither the BAM ($900US) nor an electronic crossover are needed. Any reasonably powerful amplifier would do, plus a 50Hz passive low-pass filter like the $30 Harrison.
I guess the two-coil scheme is Tony Gallo's clever way of getting a lot of bass from what is in reality a small speaker. One coil controls the small movements needed for upper-bass, the other moves the woofer a lot for low frequencies. He also fills the metal frame with a proprietary compound to increase the internal volume seen by the woofer.
Biamping isn't possible because it has a series crossover from woofer to midrange. Triamping isn't possible either because there is no electrical crossover from midrange to tweeter and because the woofer needs a low-pass filter. See Martin G. DeWulf's BFS review for more details on this.
This approach has the feeling of being clever, but introduces something into the signal path (the 50 Hz filter) that doesn't seem needed. Obviously it is, because the reviewer that tried to drive the second voice coil without the filter indicated that the result was horrilble, but I'm curious as to why that should be the case.
Quote from: brjThis approach has the feeling of being clever, but introduces something into the signal path (the 50 Hz filter) that doesn't seem needed. Obviously it is, because the reviewer that tried to drive the second voice coil without the filter indicated that the result was horrilble, but I'm curious as to why that should be the case. The second voice coil on the RefIIIs has no crossover on it, so if you don't put a lowpass filter on it, it will try to run full range, hence, the terrible results.
all this talk really tempts me to audition a pair of due's. same mid/woof & tweet as the ref-lll's. and, i'd much prefer using a standard outboard active x-over/subwoofer set-up anyway...
all this talk really tempts me to audition a pair of due's. same mid/woof & tweet as the ref-lll's.
According to the National Sales Manager of Gallo, HIFI+ probably got one of the very earliest sets of speakers and these had the tweeter phase inverted. This would account for the anomaly in the review. I think he said that Gallo was sending them a new pair for a quick re-review.
The Gallo sounds good, I would have a tough time picking between it and say the Paradigm studio 100's, which image better and have a larger sweetspot, but I don't agree with the Six Moons review.
I have heard them in a local dealer, albeit in a very crummy room/set up, mid-fi equipment (NAD amp & NAD dvd player), utilitarian IC's, no 2nd voice coil hook-up nor ded.sub-amp
...I was a happy owner of a set of Gallo Solo some Years ago, but traded them in, due to the lack of proper deep bass...