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Compared to what?
Still don't understand what makes a direct drive different from a non DD amp, but are DD amps made specifically for stats or can they be used with any kind of loudspeaker?
Electrostatic panels have a high voltage charge. The signal from the amp effects the charge - makes the diaphragm move. Conventionally driven stats have transformers which plug into the wall. Direct drive amps supply the high voltage charge which is 5KV for Acoustats.
In the late '80s I had 2 panel Acoustats with DD amps modified by Dan Fanny of American Hybrid Technology. He designed the boards and they each had 4 big high voltage cap tubes and banks of storage caps. Those amps had some slam. In general, full range stats can sound thinner because the have no box and bass reinforcement is totally room dependent. Even with big panel stats you might not get as much warmth as with conventional speakers or slower planer type panels.
Yep, very, very veiled. I was the fifth largest Acoustat dealer back in 1982-83.
About 1982-1983, I had the Model Two. And as you say, they are very room dependant. I had terrific bass down to about the mid-thirties, but slam isn't a word I would use to describe them. Have you ever tried listening to the Sheffield Drum Record with Acoustats?
I was in the top 10 and personally owned model 2's for about 15 years. Wouldn't exactly described them as being veiled, let alone "very, very" so, but they could sound that way when powered by poorly matched (tube) amps or when not setup well or used in rooms with overly damped rear walls.Never cared for any of the "plus" stacked versions. All things considered they did have excellent bass response IMO.
Never listened to demo records at home.
The drum record was NOT a demo record, much less a normal record, but a (stress) test record. Each side was only about 6 or 7 minutes in length as the grooves were considerably wider and deeper than a normal recording. My Acoustats could handle any normal garden variety drum recording, but they utterly crapped out with the Sheffield test record. Would they have faired any better with a DD amp? Maybe, maybe not.
Did Jim Strickland ever fly up to your shop?
I had that Sheffield record, I never had or sold any system that would play it correctly.
What do you mean by correctly?
Thanks for the replies--I certainly have a lot of food for thought! Any sane person would be perfectly happy with my current speakers! I just hate that nagging sense of "is there something better out there?" I am somewhat limited by speaker placement--MLs could not be as far away from the wall as optimal. My DALIs seem less fussy, and they are certainly clear and musical. That should suffice!