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And if you actually read this far... dude, get a life!
Part OneMy top-of-the-line speaker [as of June 2008], the Dream Maker, uses a configuration that to the best of my knowledge hasn't been used before. It's more of an evolutionary than a revolutionary step, but I think it brings together a desirable and perhaps unique set of attributes.Let me first describe "the goal", as I see it, and then describe how I tried to approach this goal.Most of the difference between the concert hall and the listening room lies in what’s happening in the reverberant field. In the concert hall, there’s a fairly long time delay between the first-arrival sound and the arrival of significant reverberant energy. And then when that reverberant energy arrives, it is powerful and rich and diffuse, and its spectral balance is similar to that of the first-arrival sound (only modified by the room surfaces it has encountered), and finally it decays rather slowly. It is this rich, powerful, diffuse, slowly-decaying reverberant field that gives music in a good venue that delicious aliveness and lushness that thrills and envelopes us.In contrast, in a typical home listening room the first reflections begin to arrive after only a fairly short time delay, and they tend to be distinct rather than diffuse. The relative amount of energy in the reverberant field is much less than in the concert hall, the spectral balance is usually wrong (being dominated by the speaker’s omnidirectional output, which is seldom smooth), and the reverberant field dies away fairly quickly. So, my primary goal was to put more energy out into the reverberant field, in a way that is beneficial rather than detrimental.Attempting to more closely approximate the reverberant field of a live venue is nothing new - Amar Bose did it, but in my opinion he didn’t do it right; the 901 puts too much energy into the reverberant field, and it doesn’t use high-resolution drivers. Omnidirectional and polydirectional systems (Richard Shahinian came up with the latter term) in my opinion do a better job with getting the correct balance between direct and reverberant energy. Wide-pattern dipoles (like the SoundLab A-1) or even wide-pattern monopoles (Sonic Weld and Beveridge come to mind) also give a much richer than average reverberant field, and from my experience as a SoundLab dealer I think that what’s happening in the reverberant field plays a much larger role than is generally appreciated.Now there are several formats that would put a lot of energy out into the reverberant field - dipole, bipole, and omni or polydirectional being the main ones. Why did I decide to do a bipolar system? Well, a dipole either has to be huge or equalized to have good bass extension, and in either case the displacement requirement for good bass extension at high volume levels is pretty imposing. And if equalization is required, that limits amplifier choices - I wanted my speaker to work well with SET and OTL tube amps. One problem with omnidirectional systems are the room requirements. You see, we’d like for the onset of reflections to be delayed by a good 10 milliseconds after the first-arrival sound, and this corresponds to a path length difference of eleven feet. So, ideally, an omni should be placed far enough away from the walls to avoid early reflections arriving within that time interval (okay there’s the floor bounce and probably the ceiling bounce, but those are harder to get rid of). Most of us don’t have rooms that big. This same requirement holds true for dipoles - indeed, most Maggie and Quad and Martin Logan and SoundLab and Apogee owners find their speakers sound best when positioned a good five or six feet out from the wall behind the speakers (but placement close to the sidewalls is not a problem, because dipoles have a null to the side). Omnis also have a problem with off-centerline soundstaging. While the soundstage holds up better than normal for off-centerline listeners, with some recordings they will give you “ten-foot-wide guitar and/or ten-foot-wide mouth” syndrome. I find that distracting. So, what do bipoles do that’s so special? And, perhaps more important, what are their drawbacks? (Ha! You don’t see that in ad copy every day, now do you??)
Absolute love bipols / dipols and wish to build a pair using a couple of SEAS FA22RCZs that I have in each cab. Would really appreciate if anyone has any cabinet plans I could use for these speakers and where the rear speaker should sit, bottom or at the top. Think at the top would give a more spacial feeling ?