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The one-piece baffle is standard on the SCST, whether you get bamboo or MDF. Personally I would not get bamboo if it wasn't going to be visible, since it doesn't seem to improve the sound. I wonder if the result would be lighter than the 3/4" MDF with veneer though?
But even you went with 1" despite being told there wasn't much of a difference in sound. My view is I would rather keep the svelte dimensions and get the benefits of higher rigidity using bamboo.I still wonder how bamboo compares to the currently trendy Baltic Birch or marine ply or whatever. I suppose Corian or poured concrete would be even more rigid, but the weight penalty would be brutal. Alu is what Magico is using, but they have ridiculously complicated skeletons to support all that, and I can't think that is worth it...
The SCST comes with full front baffle not one piece baffle. The baffle are built with wood trim.I cant tell for sure from the pic of the bamboo SCST, but it does look to me to be a one piece baffle.
Also, how is the crossover set up? Does the move up half an inch alter things? If one is set as mid-woofer and the other as woofer, would it be better to have one 15 and one 16?
Okay...So where I stand is:Bamboo upgradeW16 instead of W15 maybeVeneer list is long:spalted bee's wing makore is bad asswalnut italian burldark amboyna burlmyrtle burlmaidou burlolivewoodimbuya
I still wonder how bamboo compares to the currently trendy Baltic Birch or marine ply or whatever. I suppose Corian or poured concrete would be even more rigid, but the weight penalty would be brutal. Alu is what Magico is using, but they have ridiculously complicated skeletons to support all that, and I can't think that is worth it...
Stanley Lipshitz and John Vanderkooy at the University of Waterloo conducted a test a while back that concluded you could get away with loudspeaker cabinets that were relatively light-weight and flimsy as long as you had adequate bracing judiciously placed etc to make the resonances fall below their detection threshold. So, will the affects of bamboo really make an audible difference over 1" MDF if the cabinet is already braced properly? I doubt anyone would notice a difference, so don't get too caught up in trying to decide which is best. With that said, if you have the money then why not go with bamboo? To quote Sean Olive:"As long as the speaker enclosure is designed in way that its resonances are below the masked detection threshold (as Lipshitz and Vanderkooy found), you are throwing money at something that falls in the category of what Toole calls "audio jewelry." It may have no audible benefit, but being able to afford it makes you feel good about yourself."Don't get me wrong, though - I love speaker porn! Sean is just saying you don't need a riduculously inert cabinet to prevent audible resonances, and I think it is safe to say Jim's cabinets are well made and braced.
Just curious...what are the Cabinet dimensions for the SCST with the W16 woofers?
I may be fooling myself, but I hear a quality of solidity of sound that I can hear from speakers like the Vandersteen 7s and my own SoundScapes that I attribute to their inert cabinets. I think it is due to no vibration on the tweeter mount. That seems to impart a magical quality to the sound. I am just guessing though. Jim Salk works extremely hard on doing crazy stuff with his speaker cabinets to reduce vibration. I would think he wouldn’t have to work as hard if it didn’t make a difference.Bob
I'm considering the SCST in black satin with 3/4 bamboo, does it mean there will be no veneer and the bamboo would be dyed black?Would you be able to see visually it was bamboo since it's black?