0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 51297 times.
Hi Jimbones ~From time to time Deborah and I go to audio shops to listen to this or that highly rated box speakers... just for the fun of it... and to see if our 'listening' ear has changed. One's listening... one's sense of the "real" in reproduced music does change over time and this is one way to get a sort of reality check (another way to is to change amps... which I have done recently and which has indeed changed my listening habits for me... I intend to write about that soon). Deborah is not particularly interested in audio as a technology... as long as the music has something of that ineffable quality of being able to take flight and involve us emotionally, she is very happy.It is the music that Deb loves. So when we visit audio shops I am very keen to find out what she thinks. Ever since we began to listen to our Open Baffle Speakers, about 7 years ago, Deb's perception immediately hears the constrained 'boxy' non-musical sound of boxed-speakers. She does not like them.What I have found is that if one has patience and is willing to work with the Open Baffle paradigm... which means voicing them to your taste... you can get them to sound quite wonderful. No commercial speakers I have ever heard... and I have heard hundreds of 'commercial' speakers, including the top rated audio celebrities with gushing superlatives dripping from the pens of enamored audio scribes... can come close to my Open Baffles for bringing the music to life... detail, holographic spatial cues, immediacy, the penetration of the 'air' of the room which simulates a live performance of un-amplified music, depth of tone, texture and so on.What happened to me is that after working in the Open Baffle paradigm for a while, I began to 'hear' what commercial speakers actually sound like... and they all sounded/sound limited in some essential way... especially in the sense of sounding flat and directional. It is the difference between hearing a newly built musical instrument compared to one that was built centuries ago... the older instruments have that special resonance that gives another dimension to the music played on them... Open Baffle speakers sound like that to Deb and I. Also my experience regarding the question of needing space behind Open Baffle speakers seems to be different from many of our Audio Circle friends. I live in a manufactured home, my simple Open Baffle panels are around 3 feet from the front wall of our home which is mostly glass and a hard thin surface material. There is an accordion-style window shade that covers about half the windows on the bottom at all times. In other words, my home reflects what is normally considered a poor surface for the back wave to have to contend with. But the music is quite wonderful... sometimes I even pull the speaker panels closer than 3 feet... to 2 feet from the front wall... and the sound is still quite acceptable.I suspect that the reflection of the back wave from the hard surface of the wall to the front may be helped by the hard surface. There is a rug on the floor that the speaker panels rest on... and that may help to keep both the front and back wave from traveling with too much energy. I am not saying that some form of intelligent acoustic treatment would not further refine the sound... it very well could. I am only suggesting that perhaps working simply, even with the limitations of what one has, may be enough to have a very satisfying musical experience with one's Open Baffle speakers.Thanks for sharing your experiences with us... please continue to share your insights with us.With Warmest Regards ~ Richard / Ojai, California
if i may suggest, eminence beta15a is better performer. the alpha is too muddy.
This is the trade-off then, some dBs in the very low bass instead of overall clarity and articulation.
Typical cone/box speakers sound boxy. Much of the expense is trying to minimize the interior standing waves that contribute to the boxy sound and the cost of making the boxes "pretty furniture".All too often, IMO, more of the cost of box speakers goes to address these two parameters than the quality of the drivers and crossovers.Since the late 90's I have used Gallo Nucleus Solo's. Spun aluminum spheres, 6.5" main driver and a proprietary "capacitive" tweeter. No crossover. No box sound. To me, the best of both worlds, panel speaker openness with pinpoint imaging and the dynamics with which planars struggle.I have often been very impressed with the realistic and relaxed sound of OB's. I have been working on a design of an OB for efficiency. (I am just finishing 300B SET monoblocks @ about 7 watts per side). The design is a variation of Martin J. King's published OB study project using 8" Audio Nirvana cast drivers and Eminence Alpha 15 woofers. I am bi-amping with tubes. I am at the end of several months of crossover listening and almost ready to go to my finished baffles. The short take. I am really happy with the sound of the OB's, even in their "mule" baffle stage.I listen to mostly acoustic music, female vocals, jazz and classical. The sound of these OB's is simply compelling. They don't have quite the detail of the Gallo's, but I need much more power to run the Gallos. (GTA monoblocked SE40's or Rogue Magnum 150's)So, after this long post, I think that speaker choice needs to be a combination of household acceptance factor, amplification and musical tastes.Cheers,Geary
The only advantages I see in box speakers is cosmetics and in many cases a smaller footprint.
That being said, they really don't do anything wrong.
Cone drivers release a + acoustic wave to front and a - acoustics wave to back, when these sound waves meet there is a loss of 4 to 5dB in comparison to a boxed driver.
Typical cone/box speakers sound boxy.
...obviously all baffles have a bottom, its called the floor.
-Open baffle has a more tube like, airy, soundstage and presentation. Boxed speakers are more like solid state amps.
-Open baffle has no box coloration. Good boxed speakers greatly reduce this and can be very enjoyable indeed.
-Open baffle is a lot easier for DIY builds, construction wise.
Open baffle speakers need lots of space behind them, or good dampening on the rear wall, behind the speakers. For that matter, all speakers benefit from space from walls for soundstage realism.
...immediately hears the constrained 'boxy' non-musical sound of boxed-speakers.