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Danny Ritchie's GR Research speakers have great bass with plate amps and are very high efficient.
I've been looking into this and the solution seems to be, again, DIY... I'm going to have a custom-programmed hi-rez DSP/electronic crossover mated to a nice digital amp module with a few different curves set to compliment the room and a programmable parametric EQ to tame bass peaks. These components will be built into the speaker cabinet like a plate amp or passive xo would, and would also have a simple 1st order passive xo for the mid/high section.
The Yamaha NS10 phenomenon was in no way confined to the 80s. It is still seen in most of the bigger studios, and not just because it has become a familiar standard.
This sounds very intriguing. It would really be cool if the owner could connect his laptop or tablet directly to each of the amps to measure the room and program the EQ.Are we looking at a 2016 launch date?
The NS10 was/is used in recording studios, not because it's good (it's not good) but because it represented typical low budget home speakers.
A popular, simplistic notion. There is more to it than that, otherwise any low budget speaker would suffice, but the NS10 is chosen. Why?Enter this as a search term in Google: "yamaha ns10m 20 years newell", and click on the first result—a pdf entitled "the yamaha ns10m: twenty years a reference monitor. why?" for a really in depth analysis.Then look at this:http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/sep08/articles/yamahans10.htm
It does seem pretty challenging to make a high efficiency speaker that performs as well as many of the better low efficiency models.
Hmmm....... I think it seems more challenging to make a low efficiency speaker perform as well as a good high efficiency speaker. I guess it depends on which performance criteria matter the most to you. That's definitely something each person has to decide for himself.I wonder if the average speaker efficiency/sensitivity has gone up, down, or stayed the same since the1980s. Anyone know?
Over the years, it seems that the majority of the speakers considered as "reference" are of low to moderately low efficiency? This is one of the major factors that drive audiophiles to higher power amps. These high end speakers need more watts to perform at there best. So, wanted to start a discussion as to the factors that drive this issue. It does seem pretty challenging to make a high efficiency speaker that performs as well as many of the better low efficiency models.
Great stuff, Russell. Thanks for the insight. Looks like the NS-10 has some redeeming values after all. This is one speaker that I am keen to audition:http://www.sourcespeaker.com/Coherentpulse61a.htmlAny thoughts?
Yes.The speaker line lacks a certain coherent design concept to my eyes - a smorgasbord of different configurations (or a dog's breakfast) - and too much pseudo-technical hype for my taste. That, and I see some seemingly impossible performance figures; for example, see on the home page under "High End Estate Outdoor" the OD 8211. If you click on that you get this:http://www.sourcespeaker.com/OD8211.htmlUnder specifications, you see 100 db/W/M (sic - should be "dB"), but on the next line you see Max Spl (should be spl!) 137db @500 w. Where 1w yields 100 db, 10w = 110dB, 100w = 120dB, 1000w = 130dB and 10,000w = 140dB. 137dB would require 5,000w not 500. 10dB implies 10x the power; 3dB is doubling or halving; hence 137 dB for 5,000 watts. Obviously, they meant 127 dB for 500 watts, (I hope). I don't think that's a typo - that's an error, and a pretty bad one.Finally, under "about us" on their home page I see this peculiar paragraph under "reviews":Reviews? We've had many wonderful reviews from leading audio publications spanning from 1984 to 1992. The last 14 years however have been a "settling out" period where ambiguities surrounding multi-channel needed to be addressed. Single issues rather than system integration "dilute" focus. For these reasons Source Technologies has eschewed requests for product reviews. However consumer based web forums and diehard owner loyalty have provided a great deal of exposure. In 2006 there now seems to be a substantial platform for multi-channel. Look for Source Loudspeaker reviews in the near future..Near future? This was apparently written in 2006. The enterprise looks to be moribund I'm afraid. I would run, not walk away.I'm glad you liked the Yamaha NS10M information. It is an eye opener, isn't it?
I've noticed the the ATC's I currently own can sound brutal with some electronics
My only comment after just reading through this thread is this. If Daedalus Audio can make high efficiency, high quality speakers, using multiple drivers, why don't others do it, too? I know of a few others, but most speaker companies seem content to remain in the 83-89 db sensitivity range. Which is all right for many, but I choose a speaker with a bit higher sensitivity that requires less power for adequate output.
Sounds like you need the new version with the ATC made tweeter.
One item that gets overlooked is the spectral decay aspect of speakers, and THAT is where a lot of high efficiency speakers fall short. This is also an area where speaker drivers like those used in ATC excel.
Actually I was mostly pointing out to anyone reading this thread that might be interested in ATC speakers to buy the newer versions if worried about system matching (much easier with the definitely better new tweeter and crossover).BTW I don't believe D.R. is the greatest designer ever and knows more than everyone else.