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No offence to anyone, but in my audio endevours of late, the last thing I want is HI FI sound. I want REAL. I've had good hi fi sound for years and IMO, the OB b200's are closer to real than I've experienced B4. My personal setup requires bass augmentation to satisfy my listening needs, each to their own I suppose. I've yet to hear the natural timbre of female voice portrayed so accurately until now with the OB's. I think that the room has a lot to do with the outcome of baffle/wing setup, as I read many different opinions and observations. My centre baffle is 10"w and the wings are 10" and 8". Works for me. I've tried several different sizes made from thin plywood, etc. and these are the dimensions that suited me best. I like the drivers lower to the floor-23" and tilted back 4*. The baffles are 56" out from the front wall and toed in so that, I'd say, cross just behind my head. Baffles are 40" tall and will be veneered in 1/8" cork-front and back. Just have the cork stapled on the front for the test baffles. Just wanted to share my experience and say that I'm NOT going back!
Gentlemen,My definition of Hi-Fi is sound reproduction "as close as possible to the real thing". On the speaker side, dealing with dynamic speaker chassis, that might be accomplished in different ways but the OB-way seems to me both the simplest and possibly the soundest way to go. However, that of course doesn't mean that objective criteria must not be met. Like, that a single B200 on an OB will not produce 90 dB at 40 Hz whithout distortion, or more likely burn to death if you try to accomplish it. Like that, according to independent measurements published this year in two german DIY papers "Klang & Ton" and "Hobby Hi-Fi", both confirm a rise in B200's frequency response of about 10 dB between 800 Hz and 2100 Hz. This is easily heard and is now also objectively measured. When you have cured those shortcomings the B200s has a very natural and uncoloured sound be it reproduction of female voices or musical instruments and OBs will not degrade that sound.Windchaser,My somewhat stingy comments obviously hit you. Let me make some further remarks. Visaton has an own forum for their speakers (in German). Phase plugs appeared on Ebay quite early this year and they were discussed there. The designers said that of course they had tested phase plugs but the plugs did not improved the speaker. I do not totally agree with the Visaton squad. When you play sinewave-tones over the B200 you hear that the are very beamy in their frequency dispersion. Beamy both in the horizontal and the vertical space. And not uniformingly beamy but rather random even for a single tone. You don't get those beautiful lobes that manufactors and testers use to publish. I have found the same thing to be true also of the Ciare 250. Having heard those sinewaves you are totally astonished by the fact that the speakers can reproduce music so well and relatively homogenous in a given plane. Now I would like to know if the dispersion, imaging and midrange improvments that you speak of is not gained by limiting treble extension ? /Erling