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Below are my short reviews of the Open Baffle rigs we heard this year. Obviously, all opinions are my subjective taste. I tried to go to each room with a mind as open as a baffle should be - and my opinions are based solely on the systems as presented at RMAF. None of these systems have I heard before.3) GR Research Went by the room, but hardly remember them at all. Guess they didn't impress me. Will try to remember and post if I do.
I have an open baffle line source. It has a front baffle that looks a bit like the (AV123) LS-9. It uses the same tweeters (9 of them) but in free air. It also uses twelve 6.5" woofers, but they are quite different than the woofers in the LS-9. These woofers are designed to play in free air. So that is the front baffle...20" back from that is the rear baffle. The front and rear baffles are linked with an inner frame structure. The sides are open. The rear baffle supports six 12" woofers (all SW-12-16FR's). They are all direct servo controlled of course. So they will have a flat response to below 20Hz with absolute control and EQ system.In the center of the structure there is a wedge shaped divider facing the front baffle to defuse the back wave and keep it from reflecting off of the rear subs.-----------------------Cabinets for the big open baffle line sources were ready, and then not ready, then ready... but a long way from here and time was running out. I could have made arrangements to get them here but it would have just left me with a couple of days to measure, test, design networks, build out networks, and fully assemble the speakers. It was possible but left no time for any unforeseen issues. It would also mean that they would not be burned in and in top form. That is not how I want to go to a show.Plus, as big of an attention getter as that would have been, this new company was not ready to be producing these on a production level yet. It could be 6 months out from product delivery time. So while it would have been a lot of fun and a serious show stopper, rushing it in was not the most wise decision.
Sorry guys, but the enclosures for the big open baffle line sources just weren't ready yet. I had to fall back to using some LS-9's in that room. At only $799 a pair maybe it was the best value at the show. Major magazine reviews will be out shortly.
Will the open baffle line sources be pure dipole?
4) Lowther + ToneTubbyA kit speaker with the Lowther PM6A doing duty above 200Hz and an Alnico 12" Tone Tubby filling in from 200Hz to 60Hz then picked up by a little Velodyne powered sub under that. Not bad, but not great. Tonal balance a little light, which was odd as there was a powered box sub for the bottom. Yet again, a rather unengaging speaker, though livelier than some others. At least it didn't feel over managed. Plenty of detail and a bit of the Lowther shout, but overall too tame for my tastes. Imaging was unremarkable. The speaker shown was a kit; parts cost comes to about $2750. Not bad, but I think most of us here could do better with the same budget. In fact the Lowther rig I heard at last year's RMAF (Nelson Pass' personal rig) was better - but I don't know the cost.
QuoteWill the open baffle line sources be pure dipole?Yes they will, and they will play flat to 20Hz. aa
Quote from: Danny on 17 Oct 2008, 11:47 pmQuoteWill the open baffle line sources be pure dipole?Yes they will, and they will play flat to 20Hz. aaHmmm, flat - so I can get 65 cycles flat as in +-0 compared to say 100, 200, 500 cycles at around 102 db sensitivity but it took seven 93 db sensitive 10's wired in parallel to get it. Will have another line here that should do 40 BUT 20 flat??? What are you using for bass drivers? How sensitive is it? How are you measuring this?Also what are you using for the dipole mid and treble?
I have an open baffle line source. It has a front baffle that looks a bit like the (AV123) LS-9. It uses the same tweeters (9 of them) but in free air. It also uses twelve 6.5" woofers, but they are quite different than the woofers in the LS-9. These woofers are designed to play in free air. So that is the front baffle...20" back from that is the rear baffle. The front and rear baffles are linked with an inner frame structure. The sides are open. The rear baffle supports six 12" woofers (all SW-12-16FR's). They are all direct servo controlled of course. So they will have a flat response to below 20Hz with absolute control and EQ system.In the center of the structure there is a wedge shaped divider facing the front baffle to defuse the back wave and keep it from reflecting off of the rear subs.-----------------------
I wonder about the backwave being diffused? Might work great??
Why not a separete bass panel? It would probably be easier to place for best performance.