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While I'm not 100% sure on this, I 'think' Brian used these MCM woofers in the RM-1:These use a cast basket, and had a 6 hole mounting pattern.http://www.mcmelectronics.com/product/55-3550These used a stamped basket, and had a 5 hole mounting pattern. http://www.mcmelectronics.com/product/MCM-AUDIO-SELECT-55-1551-/55-1551I've seen pictures of RM-1's using both style of woofers. These have been used stock, and also modified, with the dust cap removed and a phase plug added.Also, I've seen pictures of RM-1's that used woofers based on the Infinity RS-625 speaker:http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_odkw=infinity+626&_sop=10&_osacat=293&_from=R40&_trksid=p2045573.m570.l1313.TR0.TRC0.H0.Xinfinity+625&_nkw=infinity+625&_sacat=293Maybe email or call Infinity, to see if they still have these woofers in stockparts@harman.com877-871-6755Good Luck!
I looked up the cost of Infinity Emit-R tweeters and for pairs they were $199 NOS or $165 in matched pairs in used working shape. So when the tweeters go, you would be better off replacing with something more modern at a lower price. As good as the Infinity Emit-R was in its day, when I bought my RM-1 speakers in 2001, it would be considered the end of the Emit-R reign as a standout mid-priced tweeter.
While the exact 8" woofers that Brian used are not listed on the Misco website, I did find one that looked eminently suitable as a replacement, the Misco MC8W-4A or MC8W-8A, whether you want to use two of the former in series for 8-ohm setup or two of the latter in parallel for 4-ohm setup. I would use two of the MC8W-4A in series because of the greater Xmax capability and you will come in close to the specification of 89 dB sensitivity. It would also make an easier drive for most tube amps.Except for the use of a polypropylene cone, this was probably the Megawoofer that Brian used as an upgrade or option to the RM-1.The standard RM-1 woofer was probably based on the cheapest 4-ohm 8" Misco woofer that is listed on the website. It has the same 12 oz. magnet and 1" aluminum voice coil and similar resonance frequency and the same polyether foam surround. Add a trim ring, phase plug, and some putty like on the original standard woofer, and I think you have the same exact woofer, and the trim ring and phase plug can be supplied from your old woofer. Just cut off the center cap and install the old phase plug then add some putty near the center of the cone. Glue on the old plastic trim ring and you should be back to original.However, I would buy the MC8W-4A if it were me and run them in series. Two of the MC8W-8A in parallel will be below 4 ohms in impedance and may surpass the midrange and tweeter in loudness even with the L-pads turned all the way up. Also, you get more linear Xmax with the 4-ohm drivers and my amp will put out all the power they can handle safely even as an 8-ohm load.At the low crossover used in the RM-1, I don't see the need for a graphite coned woofer, but if you need one, then Parts-Express or Madisound carries an 8", 8-ohm Audax woofer with graphite cone for $149 that will fit with some baffle and grill woodwork. Madisound also carries a couple of SEAS Discovery 8" models that will work with fiberglass cones, cast baskets, and very smooth response, in 8-ohm or 4-ohm, and for around $80 each. There is no shortage of good woofer replacements for the RM-1.If using a metal cone woofer, then breakup around 2-3 kHz may be a problem due to the 6 dB first order network. The crossover can be modified to QSO specs by using about 10 uf in parallel for 8-ohm duty and 20 uF in parallel for 4-ohm duty. That will place you close to 2 octaves away from the series inductor crossover point, but the capacitor will kick in well below cone resonance. Tweak to your particular woofer, of course. Those are ballpark figures. Dayton Audio and SEAS have metal cone woofers that could work. ScanSpeak can be considered as well.But to use the woofer cutouts that came standard on the RM-1, the Misco woofers listed on the website all had the same steel basket. Before I got rid of the passive radiator and went with a standard bass reflex port, I would look into using a resistive flow port to make an aperiodic vented enclosure. I stuffed a rolled-up cotton towel into the slot radiator port opening (being careful not to restrict PR movement) and got increased output at 32 Hz and lower, but a bit less output above 40 Hz. Sounded different, not really better or worse, so it's a personal thing. An acoustic suspension tuning would probably work best if used in a small room. A piece of closed cell foam cut slightly bigger than the slot radiator port and completely sealing the port would let you check out that possibility. Acoustic suspension produces some of the best bass in many rooms because of the slow rolloff that begins sooner but extends further into the deep bass.
Add a trim ring, phase plug, and some putty like on the original standard woofer, and I think you have the same exact woofer, and the trim ring and phase plug can be supplied from your old woofer. Just cut off the center cap and install the old phase plug then add some putty near the center of the cone. Glue on the old plastic trim ring and you should be back to original.
Hopefully, Misco will inform me of any dealers that carry the standard Misco woofers. Madisound carries some of them, but not the 8" woofers. They DO carry 6.5" Misco midwoofers that might work in some VMPS speakers such as the 626R. A call to Madisound with an interest in continual purchases of the 8" MC8W-4A and MC8W-8A might get them to stock the woofers.
John, the standard 8" woofer on the RM-1 is the Misco 8"4-ohm version with 12 oz. magnets, a 1" aluminum voice coil, polypropylene cone, with the dust cap removed and a wooden phase plug attached to the pole piece. Also added is a plastic trim ring that the standard woofer listed on the Misco website does not have. The trim ring is glued on, can be popped off, and added to a standard Misco 8" woofer. On two woofers in my kit was attached one coil of putty near the voice coil former, and on two woofers was attached two coils of putty near the voice coil former. I called Brian and discussed the differences in the woofers. The woofer with one coil of putty went on top near the Neopanel and the woofer with two coils of putty was placed in the bottom position.The putty lowered the resonance frequency of both woofers, and it also caused two slightly different resonant frequencies to occur, thus spreading out the resonances and extending the response lower, just as the passive radiator could be tuned to a lower resonance still yet. Brain chose a frequency range far below what Misco intended these woofers to cover, and the putty gives a faster rolloff of high frequencies than the Misco website shows and it also reduces any high frequency resonances in the cone, which is important with a first order network and eliminates the need for second order filtering to get rid of it.