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Josh,Are you characterizing the "sacrifice of sense of height" of smaller speakers a bad thing? I actually think that's a good thing. Magnepan's accenuate the sense of height unnaturally...IMHO. (One of their few drawbacks actually.)Cheers,Dave.
People flock to planars because of what they do well, not because they love large (typically) tall slabs dominating the room. The real question is can those properties be realized with a box? I would put accurate soundstage, 3D imaging, cohesion, and realism as the list of properties to target. Panel size and cost are variable and only trigger the degree of commitment one is capable or willing to aim for. I have strayed away from Dipole planars to a monopole planar hybrid (in a box), the Janszen zA2.1s. The Janszen electrostatic panels are indeed dipole by design but installed in a box with the rear wave defeated. I have found that the box design used presents amazing soundstage with depth without having to use a backwave. Being a monopole the speakers only need to be out into the room a little bit to sound best. Fully against the wall actually works as well but is not optimal. Full dipoles of course need plenty of back wave space to generate the magic. My Maggie 1.7s also generated some degree of false? echo on all recordings even if that was not intended, at least in my room. I never minded that phenomonon, but the Janszens reveal hall accoustics very accurately if it is on the recording, but not if its not. I find this more truthful to the recording. The stat panel's clarity, realism, and transparency are top tier and what one expects from that type of driver. The midrange bloom is heavenly and as good as it gets as far as what I have heard. The dual bass woofers in each cabinet form a line source for the bass and contribute to a high degree of cohesion. With solo piano that travels above and below the crossover I haven't been able to pinpoint when that happens at all. Well done and with no tonal shift. Oh, and the cone woofers do that punch and slam thing better than full range planars.Using a box is not a bad thing if the drivers used and the box design doesn't limit the quality goals stated above. Point Source boxes implemented without regard to defeating the things we hate would drive me back to planars in a heartbeat. If not a planar, some other approach that did what was important.
That is exactly the problem I am having in my search for the "perfect" speaker. At least in show demos large planars and stats seem to lack the intimacy I like in female vocals. It is a realistic size issue.
I've often heard that complaint about female vocals one line sources (why not male ones as well?).
Probably a personal problem regarding females with big mouths. I can relate.I think the image height issue can be somewhat alleviated if the recording has much depth information encoded. This is the case with many classical recordings, etc.However, contemporary, studio recordings that are close-miked and potted extensively can sound horrible on large planar speakers. As an example, I kind of like Norah Jones voice, but find the recordings are not great and the image irregularity is distracting when listening on my MMG's.Cheers,Dave.
I think that if intimacy is your goal, or you listen mostly to small scale stuff like chamber music, conventional boxes can be a better choice -- they give you more of an "in the room" effect, while dipoles give you a "melt the walls into a big space" effect. But you can achieve much the same thing with dipoles by putting absorption behind the speaker. Someone on the Asylum told me once that he prefers absorption to diffusion behind his planars for just that reason, he listens mostly to chamber music. Someone who was ambitious could make some kind of arrangement to change the front wall from diffusive to absorptive. I know of a studio that has hinged panels that can be opened to reveal absorptive material.
I've often heard that complaint about female vocals one line sources (why not male ones as well?).I think that if intimacy is your goal, or you listen mostly to small scale stuff like chamber music, conventional boxes can be a better choice -- they give you more of an "in the room" effect, while dipoles give you a "melt the walls into a big space" effect. But you can achieve much the same thing with dipoles by putting absorption behind the speaker. Someone on the Asylum told me once that he prefers absorption to diffusion behind his planars for just that reason, he listens mostly to chamber music. Someone who was ambitious could make some kind of arrangement to change the front wall from diffusive to absorptive. I know of a studio that has hinged panels that can be opened to reveal absorptive material.
You can affect the absortion ratio with different distances between the wall and curtain, lenght of the curtain( 1 or 2 times lenght of the wall) and different curtains. Here a special product Absorber CS, with specs and different distances....http://files.gerriets.com/downloads/produktblaetter/1-2-5-4-Akustikgewebe-Akustikvorhang_10255.pdfI have a rather normal curtain called Molton with very good results.
I like your analogy in your first sentance, Josh. It makes think that dipoles are excellent on orchestral recordings. I listen to opera and coming from my boxes are vocalists precicely placed three dimensionally on stage and an orchestra semi-wrapped around at the rear. Depth, width and detail of an orchestra in a hall on my best recordings seem very positive to me. What might the difference be in the overall presentation with dipoles? I presume the presentation would be more expansive except for width outside of the speakers? Would that be correct? Thanks for your reply.
Yes, depending on speaker placement and room acoustics (which affect boxes too) you'll get more depth and, in the case of line sources, a sense of height.
Thanks, Josh. Can you comment on width. I'm wondering if I would have to separate dipoles further apart than me boxes to get the same sense of panorama. Depending on a recording, the width of a stage and sometimes instruments themselves will appear outside of where my speakers are placed. Wait a minute before you reply and give me a chance to attach a link . . http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?action=gallery;area=browse;album=1965
Mrlittlejeans,I wondered what happened with those 3.7s.When you move into that big room I bet you'll be thinking about adding two DMW or (better yet) 20.7s.