0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 13073 times.
noticed this while browsing audiogonInteresting combination of drivers.
Maybe I missed it in the text, but what are the 15" woofers? I don't think they were ever explicitly identified like the 12" mid and compression driver.
I have to admit the price put a smile on my face!!$7800... plus tax... plus shipping... the last time I looked my OB's cost me around $400.My advice... DIY and save $7800 (mine are cheaper than the tax alone)... not to mention the wealth of real learning one experiences along the way.I suspect is sounds "bigger" but certainly not "better" qualitatively than what I am hearing right now as I type... in my world bigger is definitely not better!!With prices like that all of us who are involved in the DIY OB explorations can allow ourselves the luxury of a smile.Warmest Regards ~ Richard
Hi Zybar ~Your post is a traditional response that has its merits. No argument here. And yes... as a professional designer myself I feel it imperative that all designers... no matter what they are designing... should be payed appropriately for their services and gifts... and the products they design should reflect the Research & Development of their professional services.How do I know that my speakers sound qualitatively as good as the K&Q Sound Genesis Model 1 high efficiency planar?I find it interesting that they avoid calling their speakers Open Baffle. I will try to explain what I am getting at here.From my listening and personal experience working with OB's I have found that what is most incredible sounding about them is the essential OB sound itself... OB's have a characteristic sound... extremely open, highly saturated, tonally rich, texturally differentiated, incredibly spacious, lively and dynamic. For one thing the drivers do not have a box to limit their pistonic movement so there is no resistance to have to work around... also the problems of dampening the back-wave so it does not re-enter the cone area thereby canceling the front wave is also not an issue... early reflections which are a serious problem with boxed speakers owing to their limited dispersion pattern is also not a problem... nor is there as much of a problem of the drivers exciting the box material which duplicates frequency resonances... these factors and many others contribute to a sense of freedom... a dynamic vividness that is characteristic of all OB applications assuming that there is some synergy to the drivers and their relationship to the size and shape of the baffle.Are there differences in the sound from one OB to the another? Of course... drivers used, crossover design, design of the baffle, components used, room size, position of baffles... all of this plays a part. But assuming a reasonably well implemented OB application... the similarities will be much more apparent then the differences... and it was in that context that I wrote my post. Certainly not to take anything away from what looks like a wonderful design... even if it is too large for my space... I like Dmason's approach "less is more"... but that is a personal aesthetic choice.Of course, Zybar, please feel free to spend any sum you think neccessary to get the speakers you desire. My post was to congratulate everyone who has been... or is planning to be... adventurous enough to try their hand at a DIY OB project.Hi Angaria ~I should have said... thanks so much for bringing this new OB design to our attention. Very interesting indeed.Warmest Regards ~ Richard
It seems entirely clear to me that Dmason is very much responsible for this revolution in commercial Open Baffle speaker design... he heard an example of an OB implementation several years ago and immediately brought it to our attention... right here on AC with his exemplary "Dark Star" thread... Dmason personally urged me to jump in and explore its potential for a paradigm shift in audio... away from hifi... and toward the "real"... the attention OB's have garnered on AC have helped to stimulate commercial speaker designers to take it seriously.