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What's wrong with the looks of the MLS cabinets? I think they look stunning, at least to my eyes
The RM 30 builder changed hands and the new owners will not fix problems such as misaligned base rails.
Many times you may see discussions about "tuning" VMPS Speakers.All VMPS Floorstanding models came "over damped" with slightly more putty added to the Passive Radiator than one might need. This then meant that all one need do is remove a pea sized "pinch", let the woofers break in, and then maybe remove a fingernail or two to get it perfect.A similar procedure was suggested with the "pots" or L-Pads equaliing a basic setting and the a "fine tuning" after breakin.Well B, now does most of that be ...
The PR tuning must be done in very small increments. While amplitude response changes little with tuning, harmonic distortion changes greatly. I published curves right on this Forum last year, showing 10% THD at 20Hz on the RMX with the PR untuned and 1% THD with about half a gram of putty removed. The sound becomes dramatically clearer and the bass response subjectively (emphasis here) somes up when the tuning is done properly. I invented this bass system in 1979 and was highly gratified to see a Klipsch speaker adopt it a few years later. Imitation and flattery, you know.
I ran a long series of nearfield (room-independent) bass measurements on the RM/X (w/vitrified high-compliance PR) today and faxed them to John Casler with a request to post (something I have never figured out how to do). For Scott and other owners let me say the measurements show very smooth response (within 2dB) from below 20Hz to above 200Hz where I stopped the measurement. There are dramatic differences in THD with PR tuning. As you will see, 2nd and 3rd harmonic distortion drops from max 10.57% 2nd at 20Hz before tuning the PR, to 1.35% 2nd at 20Hz after tuning (tuning also smooths overall frequency response and raises 20Hz output by about 0.2dB.) I removed about 5 fingernail fulls of putty to tune. Please examine these curves carefully.Scott wanted measurements on the bass system of the RM/X so I ran 10Hz to 200Hz sweeps with 1/24th octave resolution and a little less than one watt input.The sensitivity (without room gain) is about 85dB at 48Hz where the system has its maximum output. Room gain (which everybody uses when quoting bass sensitivity) adds about 6 dB.Nearfield means the mic is basically almost touching the woofer cones and is flush with the center of the PR slot.Good midrange and HF measurements require an anechoic chamber. Unfortunately there is no anechoic chamber in this hemisphere large enough to make good bass measurements below around 80Hz. In-room fullrange measurements are worse than useless, since the room plays such a large role in the outcome. See my curves on the Quad 57 taken in-room some years back, as published by Stereophile. The biggest surprise in the change in 2nd and 3rd harmonics when the PR is tuned. From 10.57% 2nd harmonic at 20Hz, distortion drops to 1.31% (with 3rd harmonic even lower) merely by my removing a very small amount of putty from the PR. Amplitude response at 20Hz can also be boosted about .2dB with the PR adjustment. There is about a .5dB improvement in overall linearity when the PR is mass-optimized. The measurement degrades if another fingernailfull of putty is added or subtracted to the (vitrified, high-compliant) PR cone. Note that the system meets its -3dB point at 20Hz precisely and is only minus 4.5dB (relative to 48Hz) at 17Hz. If you neglect the 1.5dB rise between 30Hz and 60Hz the system is -3dB at 17Hz. This is outstanding linearity and bass extension. There are many more measurements that Clio and Sysid can make but this is your basic bass performance, i.e. better than any High Fidelity speaker I have encountered these past 27 years. If you have questions feel free to ask._________________Big B...
I am puzzled by your posts, Eric. You tout amateur in-room measurements made at the listening position as some measure of the loudspeaker, which is not the case. Given accurate measurements, you quibble and contest.You're a man of science, but persist in drawing erroneous conclusions from poor quality data, just because you obtained them yourself. You also make recommendations for competing equipment from zero experience with it, which is even more puzzling.