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Quote from: Bemopti123 on 29 Jun 2007, 11:48 pmPurely in aesthetic terms the Diapasons kill everything everyone has mentioned here so far, Where do you guys get off saying stuff like this?...
Purely in aesthetic terms the Diapasons kill everything everyone has mentioned here so far,
Along that line of thought the ultimate example has already been mentioned IME, the PMC AML-1. The "problem" with this type of highly accurate (and active) speaker is that most audiophiles aren't seeking the truth and aren't ready to give up part of the chase of matching speakers to amps.
grsimmon,Yes, the PMC AML-1 was your recommendation first. Compared to what some spend on passive speakers plus amps plus speaker cable, the cost isn't out of line.I've said this before, but one of my audio ephiphanies was auditioning Paradigm Studio 20s ($600/pair) versus Active 20s ($1,600/pair). Both were small 2-way standmounts using the same drivers, but thats where any comparison ended. The Actives were flatter, much more dynamic, and had unbelievably deep full bass. Nay-sayers of single driver speakers (which are active by default) should listen to actives first.I recently asked a couple of manufacturers here why they didn't develop active speakers. They both indicated technical difficulties, but as you (and Srajan Ebaen) have stated, the audio community as a whole want the romance of the hunt and etheral aspects of the music more than accuracy.
...(for you audiophiles - imagine an active speaker using tubes?)
Quote from: JLM on 1 Jul 2007, 08:17 amgrsimmon,Yes, the PMC AML-1 was your recommendation first. Compared to what some spend on passive speakers plus amps plus speaker cable, the cost isn't out of line.I've said this before, but one of my audio ephiphanies was auditioning Paradigm Studio 20s ($600/pair) versus Active 20s ($1,600/pair). Both were small 2-way standmounts using the same drivers, but thats where any comparison ended. The Actives were flatter, much more dynamic, and had unbelievably deep full bass. Nay-sayers of single driver speakers (which are active by default) should listen to actives first.I recently asked a couple of manufacturers here why they didn't develop active speakers. They both indicated technical difficulties, but as you (and Srajan Ebaen) have stated, the audio community as a whole want the romance of the hunt and etheral aspects of the music more than accuracy.I have a hard time believing that technical difficulties are an issue. Its as easy if not easier than designing a passive network. The other part is just an amplifier. I'd say the biggest reason manufactures don't do it is because they don't sell. It is as simple as that. Most audiophile consumers are stuck in the paradigm of buying a source, preamp, amplifier, and loudspeakers. Then of course you cannot forget the most important component, the cables! If you already have an amplifier you like, then buying active loudspeakers won't even make your list of components to consider.I'm developing some active designs for my loudspeakers simply because..... I want to. I like some of the extra engineering tricks it allows me to use. I also have an configurable software based analog signal processing solution that I'm keen to show off.
Totem Acoustic The One Taking the legendary Model 1 concept to the absolute limit. This is the kind of speaker you settle down with.