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Hello All, I am trying to decide between speakers with ribbons and maybe say silk dome tweeters. I have heard that ribbon speakers have superior imaging but a limited soundstage. Is this true? Would I be better off with silk domes for example. For you speaker builders out there: What is your philosophy in terms of tweeters? Why did you choose one type over the other?
Simple.... ribbons suck and domes don't. Ribbons of any length have a different verticle dispersion pattern than the horizonal. Try matching that with a radiating surface that has a different dispersion pattern. What you end up with is uneven off-axis behavior at crossover. Also... long ribbons act like a line source. The measured performance varies with seating distance. More traditional driver act more as a point source so it is difficult to design them for anything but a fixed list ...
Nope... used as a line array they at least match the dispersion and wavefront of the array of drivers. Of course line arrays are best far-field. Only really long arrays don't have comb filtering effects the alter the seated to standing FR. They are a rich man's speaker because you need lots of drivers & a big room. I'm not a fan of line arrays. That is a taste thing to some degree. They can sound good in large venues but typically don't in smaller domestic sized settings.
I can't contribute much to this, and I must say I've never owned any speaker with a ribbon tweeter, but my preconception is that, most ribbon tweeters do not last as long as the domes. This may or may not be correct but it is what I heard.Jerry
I have full-length ribbons in one of my speakers and here is my experience:Ribbon tweeters are a good idea, but they cut-off quickly with vertical dispersion, so the seating position is critical.Full-range ribbons have to be crossed-over at the right frequency or they will sound thin or break-up.They create great horizontal imaging.Can be difficult for an amplifier to drive.Ability to deal with dynamic music varies a lot from one ribbon to the next. Very few do it well.