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I would also recommend a good SS amp for the Lowthers.
Quote from: MJK on 12 Aug 2008, 12:01 amI would also recommend a good SS amp for the Lowthers. Really!?!? I don't hear that very often.
Martin (the Heretic)
I would also recommend a good SS amp for the Lowthers. Really!?!? I don't hear that very often. Yup ..... really. It is totally politically incorrect and I have been shunned by the Lowther purists and gurus.
.Regarding SS vs Tubes= I see how it is..... ......You guys finally get me over to the dark side and force me to buy tube amps, than you all "change you mind" and go back to solid state.What's up with that? Bob
Comeon Bob, who would have urged you to get some glass glowing in your system????
QuoteI would also recommend a good SS amp for the Lowthers. Really!?!? I don't hear that very often. Yup ..... really. It is totally politically incorrect and I have been shunned by the Lowther purists and gurus.Its not that odd. Mr Pass has used his F3 to drive the Lowthers in his open baffle active speaker that uses Seas bass drivers. Plus The dude from Lowther is a big First Watt fan.
OK, here are my recommended crossover options...Hope that helps,Martin
Hey there. A local buddy of mine is asking me to poke some holes in some plywood for a pair of Lowther DX2's he has. He does not have the wood working tools needed to accomplish this, so I volunteered to help him out. This is his first venture into OB. He's already got two pieces of plywood that measure 2' X 4'.I've done many baffles, but not for Lowthers, so naturally, I've got a few questions.- Where do I put the hole. You know, that whole "closer to the top, offset, front/rear mount, more to one side" argument.- What's the ideal baffle size? Should I just use his 2' X 4' pieces, or trim them to....???- What kind of bass output should he expect for a pair of DX2's on an open baffle?
Nelson Pass has, over the years, been trying to achieve the "sound" of a good single ended design with little or no negative feedback. He has admitted that tubes can sound very good and a SET is just about the perfect configuration for those requirements, with the exception of power.
Triodes are the most linear device yet conceived while transistors usually require copious amounts of NFB to achieve linearity and their vanishingly small amounts of Total Harmonic Distortion (THD). If the THD figures equated to good sound, then all would be right with the world, but it seems that this isn't the case as tubes have many times the THD as most SS amp and yet... Nelson Pass has been advocating reduction in NFB, especially Global Feedback, as a key to better (more tube-like?) sound. Coupled with reduction in the number of gain stages (he's down to one stage on the recent designs) he seems to have achieved significant sonic advances with his First-Watt designs.
Many of the best speaker designers (Greg Monfort for example)
I believe that bi-amping is the way to go with tubes for the mids and treble (they sound great) and a powerful SS amp for the bass. Yes, you should look at the impedance curve of your woofers and you can certainly apply the series resistor trick to see if you can add some bass extension with the SS amp.Best Regards,TerryO
I'm a bit confused here Bob. What method(s) did you use to construct all those many baffles? Why would these very same methods no longer apply for your buddy's to be built system?