Vini darko
Major Contributor
Nice powered speakers. I like them
I remember a few years ago some manufacturer made a bicycle frame from beryllium
Focal has rather blinder-like focus on low distortion and the W cones are about the best out there. Truly brilliant cone design. Consider for a moment that these are nearfield monitors and 86dB per speaker at 1m is far louder than you'd be listening at most times, and clearly the distortion behavior is excellent.
Damn, look at that driver frame! Clearly a lot of thought has gone into minimizing reflections.
I tend to prefer a 3-way over a 2-way, it will mostly mean less distortion and better midrange.There's been a few beryllium bike frames made over the years, probably the most famous/infamous was the American Bicycle Manufacturing built version in 1996 which used lugs to hold the beryllium tubing, insanely expensive at $30,000 but provided them with worldwide exposure so compared to an expensive advertising campaign it was a win for the company, I doubt they sold any that were used in anger but I still wanted one at the time, and a toga disk drive wheel just like John Tomac rode.
And back to the topic in question........I'm now in a quandary over which monitor to get for my room, do I get the Dynadio LYD 48 with 3 drivers or the Focal Solo 6BE?, by all accounts the Dynadio's are excellent and now Amir has thrown me a curveball with the review of the Focals as they are the same price. Going in my fully treated room for near/close midfield use (no more than 2m distance), I mostly listen to electronic music - shame I can't demo them at all nor visit a store to try them out due to my multiple sclerosis confining me to the house...bugger!
![]()
Do you also stomp your feet when people compare any supercar to Ferrari and Lamborgini? In this place, at least, Genelec and Neumann are seen by a lot of people as benchmarks (which doesn't mean without reproch) of objective audio performance. Do you think this is a misattributed status?the usual suspects are giving free advertising for Genelec.
Since you have a subwoofer, why not the smaller and more accurate Genelec/Neumann? After all, the only advantages of this monitor are width (less important than off-axis smoothness in the nearfield) and good deep bass.There's been a few beryllium bike frames made over the years, probably the most famous/infamous was the American Bicycle Manufacturing built version in 1996 which used lugs to hold the beryllium tubing, insanely expensive at $30,000 but provided them with worldwide exposure so compared to an expensive advertising campaign it was a win for the company, I doubt they sold any that were used in anger but I still wanted one at the time, and a toga disk drive wheel just like John Tomac rode.
And back to the topic in question........I'm now in a quandary over which monitor to get for my room, do I get the Dynadio LYD 48 with 3 drivers or the Focal Solo 6BE?, by all accounts the Dynadio's are excellent and now Amir has thrown me a curveball with the review of the Focals as they are the same price. Going in my fully treated room for near/close midfield use (no more than 2m distance), I mostly listen to electronic music - shame I can't demo them at all nor visit a store to try them out due to my multiple sclerosis confining me to the house...bugger!
![]()
Focal seem to have quite the fanboy population. This is honestly quite bad for the price, when you consider the competition: Sweetwater has the 8340A only $200 higher and 8330A for $900 (can get a pair of those with a 7350A for the same price).
I mean, midrange full of resonances (probably from the port, as the woofer nearfield measurement is clean) including a wide hump around 1 kHz, an obvious directivity issue (that'll induce brightness in the mid field) that the resident audiophile population explains (which is not the same as "justify") with the house sound blurb that you see from B&W cultists, no builtin DSP and high midbass distortion.
What are you on about? The smaller and cheap Peerless in a 8030C does better at 86 dB.
When Revel manages to be wide while still using waveguides, you know it's only an excuse.
Eh? If you ignore H2, it's certainly quite good. In a comparison with the 8050B, it's clearly better in the deep bass, but a lot worse after (where it matters, because subwoofers exist).
I think we agree. That region is seemingly responsible for sense of spaciousness. Focal seem to be aiming for that super spacious sound, and they're willing to sacrifice a bit of directivity uniformity to get there. The level of sacrifice required is greatest for their 2 way models, but gets less and less as you move up their lines into 3 and 4 way models.
This seems to be a deliberate strategy to differentiate themselves from competitors. Compared side by side with Genelec, Focal is much less uniform, but much wider. I can easily see why both might be preferred by different people.
View attachment 144820
The Genelec should image tighter, but the Focal should have a wider soundstage. Preference depends on what is more important to the individual.
Honestly, that's an interesting question, but personally, I don't qualify a speaker that has a lack of directivity in a limited area as "wide", but that's really a question of words, at this point.Eh, kinda. Revels do tend to be wider than the typical waveguidey speakers, but this speaker, like other focals, is still noticeably wider up to higher frequencies. The inverted dome makes it such that the typical focal is only down about 10dB at 90 degrees and 8kHz, while the typical revel is down about 15dB. It's substantially wider in a frequency range where it still counts imo. This is readily apparent in the horizontal SPL graphs for various focals vs various revels.
I wasn't aiming at anybody in particular, just the use of the expression on such a forum to excuse it. It explains that it's at least Focal's intention, but not that this isn't what accuracy is about (this is a studio monitor, after all).I guess you're referring to me with the "house sound blurb" comment? I don't own any Focal speakers, so I definitely don't think I'm a fanboy. I also didn't make that comment as a means to justify the other flaws with this speaker. I just truly believe (based on almost all Focal speakers showing it) that the 2-8/9kHz dispersion width bulge is something Focal is aiming for.
He was even more vocal about smoothness, which was included in his and Olive's score unlike width. And this whole point of view isn't about fidelity/accuracy but group preference (which is something worthy, just had to point it out).Dispersion width matters, and Toole has been pretty vocal about the fact that most folks seem to prefer the wider apparent source width that comes from wider dispersion in that same region.
This has been discussed at length: you can't conclude this just based on the test conditions, as mono listening favours wide dispersion, and the Salon2 produces much smoother bass due to the woofer array and its distance to the ground.The M2 measures flatter and smoother on and off axis than the Salon2, but still lost handily under blind conditions, simply because the Salon2 has wider dispersion. Therefore I don't see anything as a given here.
Sure, but there are subwoofers, pair gain and boundary gain enhance especially this region and 96 dB (let's say 105 dB if near a hard wall) in the nearfield is violent. For their respective tasks, I really consider the 8030C/KH120A better.Sure, but also worse at 96dB.
Can't deny this, but their whole strategy simply doesn't work well with 2-way speakers.I haven't seen a Revel measured yet with dispersion this wide. This is around +/- 80-90° at points. Revels are more consistent, but also usually 65-70°, at least from what I remember.
Well, I kind of agree with you on this, and that's one of my major complaints with Genelec's 2-way models, but audibility of very low frequency distortion is quite low.I don't think we should just sweep the superior bass distortion under the rug like this "because subs". The bass distortion performance of this speaker is exceptional for the size, and even the Genelec 8050B can't match it. Not everyone uses subwoofers.
I tend to prefer a 3-way over a 2-way, it will mostly mean less distortion and better midrange.
OT question: this is one really nice desk, is it DIY or where can I get one?
Since you have a subwoofer, why not the smaller and more accurate Genelec/Neumann? After all, the only advantages of this monitor are width (less important than off-axis smoothness in the nearfield) and good deep bass.
Seeing the length of your desk, elevating your monitors a bit more should be a good gain.
Honestly, that's an interesting question, but personally, I don't qualify a speaker that has a lack of directivity in a limited area as "wide", but that's really a question of words, at this point.
I also wonder if width is really that important past a certain value; for monopole speakers, of course.
So my experience with waveguided speakers is that unless they're designed absolutely perfectly they do more harm than good. Yeah, you're going to get some directivity error on a flat baffle, but I'd rather that than the weird upper octave diffraction effects a lot of waveguided speakers tend to show. Besides, if you design the crossover and cabinet correctly you can largely minimize it.Yeah, would be interesting to see more research into this. Purely going by my own experience though these seemingly subtle directivity differences are often what end up making the choice between two speakers once the FR is mostly in the 'good enough' range. And the region from 2-8khz is really responsible for most of what we consider to be soundstage cues.
Not just responding to you here now, but making some general observations. The way I've always kind of interpreted the measurements is that Focal's and other wide speakers exhibit something a bit closer to constant horizontal directivity compared to your typical waveguidey speaker. For example, here's the normalized directivity for the Genelec 83541A vs the Focal Aria 906 (using the 906 as an example because it has better directivity behavior than the Solo6).
Genelec:
View attachment 144854
Aria:
View attachment 144851
While the Genelec's measurement is prettier, if we go by the logic of "how similar are sidewall reflections to the direct sound?" I'm not totally sure the Genelec have that much of an advantage. Even if the focal's is a little bumpier, one could argue the Focal's off-axis is more similar because:
That second point is why I think I tend to like wider directivity speakers. Maybe it's not just that they're wider, it's that they're closer to constant horizontal directivity. That's my logic for why the D&D 8C is the only waveguidey speaker I've truly been enamored by. While sidewall reflections will be quieter overall, they are also less tilted and therefore more tonally similar to the direct sound.
- It's closer in volume to the direct sound
- the off-axis sound is less tilted. Reflections from the Genelec are going to be darker.
Of course, this is all just theorizing based on my own experiences. I don't have much in the way of research backing this up, since so few studies seem to pay attention to directivity width. Just that one Toole study from 1984 and some inferences based on research on room treatment.
A cool experiment would be to have someone design a waveguide for such a tweeter that we could tape on and off on the speaker and judge the difference. There are some challenges with this as far as diffraction and such but if we get close, it would be a very cool experiment.This seems to be a deliberate strategy to differentiate themselves from competitors. Compared side by side with Genelec, Focal is much less uniform, but much wider. I can easily see why both might be preferred by different people.
do you mean something like the '' shadow '' waveguide in the r series from KEF? i mean you can move that thing... and remove with the handsA cool experiment would be to have someone design a waveguide for such a tweeter that we could tape on and off on the speaker and judge the difference. There are some challenges with this as far as diffraction and such but if we get close, it would be a very cool experiment.
Do you also stomp your feet when people compare any supercar to Ferrari and Lamborgini? In this place, at least, Genelec and Neumann are seen by a lot of people as benchmarks (which doesn't mean without reproch) of objective audio performance. Do you think this is a misattributed status?