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@NuanceI'm getting the standard curly cherry dyed to a darker hue to approximate a reddish brown mahogany. Nothing too fancy since something pretty but not showy would best fit in my living room. I do like to see the more lively finishes that other folks have gotten, though, like the burls and richly striped rosewoods. Jim Salk does beautiful work.@floresjcI think Dennis had taken some drivers out of the HT2 to work on with the HT1-TL, but in any case the HT2's weren't setup in the listening room.Actually I didn't mention the tour of the "mad scientist's chamber" downstairs where the corpses of gutted speakers sit ghoulishly in corners and stacked on top of each other like coffins in a crumbling mausoleum. I was saving that bit for closer to Halloween.
Halloween is very dangerous around here. The children come, but they don't all leave. You are quite right about the HT2's. I had to harvest the W18 in my HT2 to build a pair of HT1 TL's. But to my ears the comparison between the HT1 and ST was very similar to the HT2 and ST. The HT series sounded a little "rounder" and fuller in the lower treble, and the midbass was slightly less accentuated. You hear stuff like that with the magic A-B box. But whether you would pass a blind test just walking into the room, I dunno.
Great write up!Have you ever compared these speakers in mono side by side?I believe that is the easiest way to hear differences between the two.I have done this extensively with the Songtowers and the HT3's just for fun, I know get a life Thoughts?
Nousaine told me that he could tell alot about speaker imaging by listening to one speaker only (I assume because of dispersion characteristics).