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Hi James and everyone else following this : The ST/R are FINALLY downstairs!!! Between the constant rain were stuck in the garage, then another two days in my enclosed deck awaiting a proper dolly my neighbor has and his help. These Bastards are HEAVY plain and simple. Self Medicating now throwing back a few cold-ones (Cone-head style)Pretty sure these will never see sunlight ever again, I am now of the opinion every home needs at least a dumbwaiter or escalator with reverse!!! James you mentioned the passive loading changed as much as Brians shirts. These earlier designs just don't allow for a hand to putty pinch as the later designs do with their larger slot opening, like my RM-1s allow. How did you guys adjust the putty loading without laying the speaker on its side and pulling its bottom base off ???????? The slot just don't fit a mans hand. My earlier Tower II and later the Tower II special edition with the rounded cabinet were both similar with the small slot opening.Also James is there any benefit to throwing the bi-amp switch and running bi-wire through one amp ???Thanks for letting me pick your thoughts/memories of this Iconic Brand of Loudspeaker, VMPS, there never will be another like it period, nobody has the balls!Sincerely,DW
In the original post Big B said yellow carpenter's glue. So probably this is the wood glue, not the ubiquitous "Elmer's Glue-All". I think this is the product he refers to:http://www.elmers.com/product/product_page.asp?pCode=E700Big B will you confirm?Wood glue does make sense since this is a paper woofer and paper is obviously a derivative of wood.I'll head to HD later and pick some up along with a 2" paintbrush. Most of the job for me will be moving the RM/X to the ground and then particularly back upright (about the only time I wear the old hernia belt ) so I'll probably remove the passive drivers completely and paint them on both sides like Big B did.
The yellow carpenter's glue is the stuff you want.You're right, this is the wrong time for a cheap tweak like the Elmer's paintjob. Forget I said anything.
Some years ago John Bau coated the paper cones of his TC50 with Elmer's glue to stiffen them.Unfortunately it also rendered the diaphragms noiser, negating any benefit. However, since the noise is mostly high frequency I always wondered whether Elmer's (yellow carpenter's) would stiffen woofer cones to good effect.Since our Passive Radiators are very low mass (less than 20g) paper cones I decided to paint them (both sides) with Elmer's, let them dry, and reinstall (being careful not to let glue drip onto the spider).The results are most efficacious. In other words, try it and be amazed. You may or may not want to remove a little putty from the PR to compensate for the residual mass of the glue solids.If you don't care to take out the PR just paint the side of the cone facing you. You will have to unscrew the base to access the PR. Works well with all floorstanders and subwoofers we make.Enjoy!!
A thin coat is fine, apply with a 2" brush and don't allow drips or puddles to accumulate. Allow to dry 6 hrs before playing. Lots of fun, big rewards.Keep the glue away from the foam surrounds.
I have the drivers back from re-foaming at Millersound and installed. Bill did a fantastic job on these, even put Dynamat-Extreme on the 15" active bass. Bill does excellent work and is who I turn to for speaker repair of any kind.Very happy with these but not so much in my Crown K1 to run these full range as I'm forced to do at present, as I cant bi-amp like I was doing with my RM-1s. Am searching now for a more suitable power amp. The Crown does bass though, and these really kick some booty on the bottom end!
I did not Vitrify these yet either wanting more to hear them first without. The 1oz fishing weight glued worked out fantastic, flattened then glued with 3 1/2 inch on one and 4 inches of putty on the other.
All drivers up an sounding fine, just cant comment much further until a more suitable amp comes my way. Roger any suggestions on a 100-150 watt amp to do justice on these ??? Going to dig out my Stereophile issue and see what AHC was driving them with when he reviewed these, of course any suggestions always helpful. So that's about it for now, a little late but I did come to class.
DW - As you asked for Bi-Amping, I used my Carver Receiver 2000 (200 watts/channel) for the highs and the Carver TFM-35 (250 watts/channel) for the mids/bass for 23 years with excellent results for the speakers I sold you. Any reasonably power amplifier would also provide excellent results due to the simplicity of Brian’s OX design not affording a difficult load to drive. There is plenty of Carver used equipment on E-Bay and AudiogoN and you would able to join a new Carver blog at http://www.carveraudio.com/phpBB3/index.php. Roger
To Shear Bliss and James,My ST/R passives are a few years old, are vitrified and came with (per Brian) a lead slug in the center with a small amount of putty on top of the slug. The putty is a disk about the size of a half-dollar or so. The talk about adding a 1 oz fishing weight and 4" of putty, with what I now have do my passives need the added weight and putty before tuning? I have been under the impression the passives were shipped overdamped and the idea was to remove putty bit by bit until it gets dialed in. I tried tuning but it was difficult because as mentioned every removal (or addition) of putty required putting the cabinet on its back and unscrewing the base, which is a pain and slows down the process. I really could not hear much difference with the limited amount of times I tried.To Venkman,I concur with Shear Bliss. Get those ST/R's out of storage and start enjoying them!Thanks,Ed