OK, the article is about crossovers but...
-
- Posts: 580
- Joined: Mon Feb 27, 2017 1:47 pm
- Location: East Staffordshire
- Has thanked: 0
- Been thanked: 1 time
OK, the article is about crossovers but...
some of the sentiments expressed here are pertinent: http://lampizator.eu/SPEAKERS/Practical ... 20DIY.html
- karatestu
- Posts: 5998
- Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2017 4:40 pm
- Location: North Yorkshire
- Has thanked: 1886 times
- Been thanked: 1429 times
Re: OK, the article is about crossovers but...
I have read that before but it was years ago. Thanks for the reminder.
Yes it seems he shares the throw the objectivist stuff in the bin view.
I like the bit that says he studied speaker design and designed them for years and they were all complex, unmusical shite. Cutting bits off table legs to make it level is a good anology. You end up cutting more and more bits of the music away until there is no music left.
The doc's way to design speakers is all about the music. Just a shame that a tweeter needs a protection cap to stop the lower frequencies damaging it. If that could be got rid there would be even more music
Music at the expense of a table top flat frequency response is something i can live with. The music is where it's at.
Yes it seems he shares the throw the objectivist stuff in the bin view.
I like the bit that says he studied speaker design and designed them for years and they were all complex, unmusical shite. Cutting bits off table legs to make it level is a good anology. You end up cutting more and more bits of the music away until there is no music left.
The doc's way to design speakers is all about the music. Just a shame that a tweeter needs a protection cap to stop the lower frequencies damaging it. If that could be got rid there would be even more music
Music at the expense of a table top flat frequency response is something i can live with. The music is where it's at.
DIY FREE ZONE