0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 26667 times.
I have been bitten by the open baffle bug. A friend of mine purchased some Spatial Hologram M1 a couple of weeks ago. I can't believe the sound from these speakers. I used to work at a hi-end store in town and have heard many very expensive highly reviewed speakers. None of them come close to these. One day last week I even took my Fisher 400 cx-2 and paired it with these. It was a slice of heaven. The sound stage, the bass, the richness and detail are incredible. I am interested in trying something of my own. I have built econowaves so I have some experience in building. I want as much as I can get of the M1 sound but I do understand that these are $4k speakers. I have read about the Hestia, the gainphile, and the Manzanita builds. I would like to keep the size close to that. I am also on a fairly limited budget.Which design is going to get me some/most odd that M1 sound in my smallish listening space.Thanks in advance.
My latest OB pairs an Eminence Alpha 15A and a Fostex FF85WK full range driver. The baffle is 18" wide by 24" tall and is tilted back 15 degrees. Second order crossover, active or passive (I like the passive version much better), works well. Good bass from the 15A, the Fostex full range driver is very smooth all the way to 20 kHz, and best of all low cost. Great performance at an entry level price.
MJK,Have you experimented with U or H shaped baffles ? Or even a single wing on one side ? (I've heard many good things about augmenting the bass with those Alpha 15A's..)thanks
I would not get caught up in the Spatial Hologram Horn/Controlled Directivity path. I went down that path ending with 15 inch Geddes waveguides and was not very impressed. The magic is in OB, not waveguides.
It's a level harder than boxed speakers. I think, FWIW, etc.
Siegfried Linkwitz wouldnt spent 10 years and go thru hundreds of pages of documentation if this was an easy task to get right.an OB must be atleast 3-way, and must have an active crossover to work properly. or else you will run into polarresponse issues, dipole peak issues etc. while the on-axis response often is quite random.there are LOTS of poorly designed OB speakers out there, many of them look like lego`s with no real design goal in sight, they are just OB for the sake of it.sure, you can audition a simple passive 2-way and say it sounds good. but that doesnt mean its a good design on paper.a box speaker is easier to good measurable results from imo, but it will still sound somewhat like a box, because of its omni transition