It helps to kill the front wall reflection, like I do in my room.i meant with only stereo. the extra room interaction seems to render dialog that’s down in the mix harder to understand.
It helps to kill the front wall reflection, like I do in my room.i meant with only stereo. the extra room interaction seems to render dialog that’s down in the mix harder to understand.
not if you want to stay married to my wife. i am lucky to get to have the linkwitz in our main living room.It helps to kill the front wall reflection, like I do in my room.
Still disagree. One of the best tightest center presentations I've had was using Magnepan 3.3Rs.i meant with only stereo. the extra room interaction seems to render dialog that’s down in the mix harder to understand. also, arent the maggies very directional?
Large planars like Magnepan or Martin Logan are line sources from the mid bass and up, and will practically eliminate floor and ceiling reflections. With the right toe-in you can also get rid of the nearest wall reflection. Gimmicks? I don’t think so.
I think the big challenge is the other way around. Modern speakers are heavily focused on solving the aesthetic issue. Smaller speakers tucked away in corners vs. Magnepans that are restricted in position. Concentric drivers can be thought of as a unconventional design as are cardioid bass designs.I have come to believe that most "non-conventional" tried at one point in time ,to solve some problems. These are today either solved, or in the process of being solved by "conventional" designs.
I think conventional speakers are best at a “they are here” presentation of the music. It’s focused and imaging is mostly between the speakers. Wide directivity and room design can make things more enveloping, but scale is still mostly defined by the speaker layout.
With dipoles you have more of a “you are there” experience. I say “there” very loosely though because that expansiveness is not an attribute of the recording, but a psychoacoustic consequence of how these kinds of speakers interact with a room to produce this effect with any recording. I think it is a compelling alternative but most suitable to music only and less appropriate for home theater.
At least this is what I’ve experienced. I’d love for this comment to be ripped to shreds because that’s how I learn.
For the sake of this question, let's assume that a conventional speaker has:
Basically all the most well regarded speakers on ASR follow this convention (all executed differently, of course), from manufacturers such as Neumann, Genelec, Revel, KEF, Kii
- a box or box-ish enclosure
- one tweeter
- one or more woofers
- an analogue crossover or DSP
My question is, is there any merit to speakers that stray from this convention? Examples include:
Can any of these other types of speakers seriously contend with the most well engineered designs from a company like KEF?
- Magneplanar (e.g. Magnepan)
- ESL (e.g. Martin Logan)
- Open baffle (e.g. Spatial Audio Labs)
- Linkwitz's designs (e.g. LX521)
Unfortunately you'll hit their limits quite quickly. That's why I've converted mine (5.1 setup based on 3.7 and 3.6) to active crossovers, moved the crossover points higher in frequency, and added large dipole mid-bass systems for each Magnepan, and also a Double Bass Array subwoofer system, essentially making it a 5-way active speaker. Both the Magnepan ribbon tweeter and the planar drivers themselves actually measure very good, although any Magnepan with its original passive crossover doesn't.The Magnepans remain my favorite speaker for listening to music as long as it is within the dynamics of the speaker.
Plus I have cats, and maggies look very fun to climb.
Wait. Cats? Australia?Compared to another unconventional design loudspeaker, the DCM Timewindow, they are a bit boring. They were giant, perfectly constructed cat scratching poles...
To her credit, a few blasts of pink noise and she stayed away (bless her long departed feline soul) and I quickly sold the TimeWindow 1as to a collector without a cat. I miss her, not the TWs.
Our latest addition (we have two cats now), is a young ragdoll and he just loves to hang out on my lab desk playing with the computer mouse and generally taking up half the space...
View attachment 404050
View attachment 404051
Handsome fella! I have an 18 year old Ragdoll (as well as a British shorthair and a chihuahua). They’re great catsCompared to another unconventional design loudspeaker, the DCM Timewindow, they are a bit boring. They were giant, perfectly constructed cat scratching poles...
To her credit, a few blasts of pink noise and she stayed away (bless her long departed feline soul) and I quickly sold the TimeWindow 1as to a collector without a cat. I miss her, not the TWs.
Our latest addition (we have two cats now), is a young ragdoll and he just loves to hang out on my lab desk playing with the computer mouse and generally taking up half the space...
View attachment 404050
View attachment 404051
Handsome fella! I have an 18 year old Ragdoll (as well as a British shorthair and a chihuahua). They’re great cats
View attachment 404062
Most planar speakers (e.g. Magnepan, Quad, Martin-Logan, Sanders) don't go very loud.
If the opportunity is given, why not try a well designed dipole or omni? If you haven't tried, you don't know if you like that type of construction. Maybe you like the spread of sound ? Or you think the sound becomes imprecise and "smeared". Likes and tastes and all that.For the sake of this question, let's assume that a conventional speaker has:
Basically all the most well regarded speakers on ASR follow this convention (all executed differently, of course), from manufacturers such as Neumann, Genelec, Revel, KEF, Kii
- a box or box-ish enclosure
- one tweeter
- one or more woofers
- an analogue crossover or DSP
My question is, is there any merit to speakers that stray from this convention? Examples include:
Can any of these other types of speakers seriously contend with the most well engineered designs from a company like KEF?
- Magneplanar (e.g. Magnepan)
- ESL (e.g. Martin Logan)
- Open baffle (e.g. Spatial Audio Labs)
- Linkwitz's designs (e.g. LX521)
Sonab OA14 has an unconventional design. Not dipole, not "true" omni but well something is it.
It’s got to be one of these. Do they even have domestic animals in Australia?Wait. Cats? Australia?
For the sake of this question, let's assume that a conventional speaker has:
Basically all the most well regarded speakers on ASR follow this convention (all executed differently, of course), from manufacturers such as Neumann, Genelec, Revel, KEF, Kii
- a box or box-ish enclosure
- one tweeter
- one or more woofers
- an analogue crossover or DSP
My question is, is there any merit to speakers that stray from this convention? Examples include:
Can any of these other types of speakers seriously contend with the most well engineered designs from a company like KEF?
- Magneplanar (e.g. Magnepan)
- ESL (e.g. Martin Logan)
- Open baffle (e.g. Spatial Audio Labs)
- Linkwitz's designs (e.g. LX521)