0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 18840 times.
I have a little hole around the 250hz - 1 khz range which wasn't there before.
There are many definable aspects of what makes for good playback fidelity but none more important than dynamic realism. In order for music and noise to sound real through recording and playback, the electronics, recording medium, environment and loudspeaker must be capable of recreating the natural dynamic range and contrast of the event.
The benefits of break-in are expecially obvious and sometimes dramatic on full range drivers. If you owned 10 dozen 2, 3, 4 way speakers with crossovers in the 2kHz - 5kHz range, you won't likely have experienced as much benefit from driver break-in as with the Zu FRD.
Are the Soundstage measurements legitimate? No. How many times does this have to be cited? The Druid requires a floor and an air-gap between the base and the floor, and moreover, the small changes in the height of that air gap have large consequences to performance and texture of bass. On the Definition this is not an issue.
They have Mike Watt power, romance of Shane MacGowen and honesty of John Lydon.
Zu changes the order of emphasis in design attributes compared to what most speaker companies believe is important. It's not that tonal accuracy is sacrificed, it's that Zu believes transient consistency, phase coherence and dynamic range to be essential to fidelity and your sense of emotional enjoyment, too.
Soundstage was given directions for measuring the speakers - they fire out a vent in the base that REQUIRES a narrow-range gap to the floor to load the driver correctly. They did not follow the directions and the measurements suffered.I will call your musings an incorrect hunch. My most-recent findings are as such:+/- 3 db from 31 hz to 250 hz, except a 5 db hump at 100 hz. Down about 6 db at 500 hz and 1 khz, and +/- 3 db from 2 khz to 8 khz. Above that, the measurements go down considerably bu ...
Well...though I can find no technical explanations, it appears that the marketing speak says that you're right. . .
Afaik, the whizzer cone increases and incites beaming. It is used to extend frequency response on axis but causes increased fall off off axis.