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I love the history lessons James! Please feel free to continue as much as desired! Thanks!
VMPS QSR 626 - One Speaker Used As Center - (Independence, Missouri) $250 BINhttp://www.ebay.com/itm/172123794416?rmvSB=true"VMPS QSR 626 speaker. Single speaker. Used as center center. Seems to work very well. Paypal only. US bidders only."
Don't encourage me, I'll never get anything done around here!The original Japanese JVC planar super tweeters are absolutely awesome, even by today's standards (for the top octave, they fall off rapidly <5k Hz...we had the FR graph at one time, they go above 20k), outperforming every later VMPS super tweeter except the RIBBON. Every true ribbon (one exception) has a transformer because the diaphragm is pure metal w/ultra low impedance. No transformer is a PLANAR w/diaphragm comprising a metal-coating over a non-metallic/usually polymer substrate. The JVC outperforms even the much later spiral tweeter which is either a direct replacement or a clone of the old Genesis.Only one ribbon I can think of employed no transformer, a British ribbon in Brian's huge and uber costly tower in the early/mid 80s. The brand name escapes me and it's load impedance was <1 Ohm. It was impossible to drive alone, required multiples wired in series. I think Brian used 4 of them. VMPS super tweeters in descending performance sequence:FST w/transformerOriginal JVC planar ("JVC" stencil on magnet, tossup between JVC and Philips, former sweeter and more musical, latter a little more detailed and dynamic but higher distortion)Philips large black planar (just remembered this one, came after the JVC clones, very nice, less sensitivity and output than FST, sound improved with wave guides removed but looks drop from very nice to very not nice)Taiwan JVC clone planar, looks very similar but "Taiwan" stencil on magnet, a little less refined sounding, likely similar performance to later Black Foster planar and later still spiral planar tweeter, but all three sound a little different
Strathern ribbons?
Yes, thank you. My google search failed. That was the best sounding of all VMPS Ribbons, but again, very difficult with which to work.
Would have loved to try the Strathearn ribbon panels, but cannot find them anywhere anymore.
Did Brian ever build a design using Strathearn drivers? Plus, didn't Brian have the U.S. import rights for the Strathearn ribbons? Or was that Dr. Michael Alan Marks, aka, the 'infamous' Magic Marsky? He built the QRS/Magnepan hybrid that I pictured in my previous post.
Here's another brochure of a classic VMPS speaker - Widerange Ribbon. I first heard these at Clark Johnsen's huge loft (store) by the waterfront in Boston. They were awesome and massive. It was quite an experience.
Very nice! Good job! How many ribbons? I can't read the spec sheet, even maximum size and brightness? Looks like six in the image. Six x .35 Ohm each is still only 2.1 Ohm in the mid range, a brutal load for most amps. As per industry norm, the "3.0 Ohm Minimum" is a little, shall we say, optimistic. Explains Brian's affection for the Eagle 7A and latter the Plinius SA250 mkIV (about 150 lbs, 250Wpc Class A). When I'm wrong, I go all out! JVC super tweeter, dual 8s not 6.5s, and dual 12s in the tower. Each baffle section holding the 8s and 12s is offset IFO the main baffle holding the JVC super tweeter and the ribbons. The baffle looked busy.
I have one of these brochures and could scan it if there is interest. The specs read:Midrange/Treble: 5/16" x 130" ribbon element, side-by-side traces, radiation height 69"Supertreble: 3/16" x 2 1/4" ribbon-Gary
Extrapolating the math, looking at Brian's well done sketch and HP's design, each Strathearn ribbon is an estimated 12" tall. 69" alleged total ribbon radiating height/12" = 5.75, and it looks like six panels in Brian's diagram.I read elsewhere the Strathearn presents a load impedance of .35 Ohm, which x6 in series = 2.1, 30% lower than Brian's "3 Ohm" spec. My Hypex nCore Stereo NC400 could easily drive that load, but no other amp I ever heard of that weighs 8 lbs, cost <$1500 USD, and idles @ 4W.
I found this on another Forum. From Big B himself."...the Widerange Ribbons. Their minimum impedance was 3.5 Ohms, not a bad load. We did not employ the Strathearn transformers, but used ballast resistors instead to bring up the impedance."