![]() ![]() Moreover, most of these people has never played an instrument for real or made recordings in a pro Blue Note studio. Sound is still one of sience most unanswered questions - take a look at any forum and you'll see who much people disagree. Well, it's true that I do not know much about audio, tubes and speakers - but I have never ever met anyone who really knows what audio/sound is about. I know a guy who constructed a Stereophile class A speaker and he claims as well that we, humans, need distortion in some terms. I worked many years with almost all speakers availebly(not ALE or Goto and WE), but almost all others famous JBL, Altec, PHLs, ribbons, Audax, Scan Speaks, Vitavox, Coral, Goodmans, etc etc.Īfter I heard TAD beryllium, I sensed that something was wrong with all other equipment.Īfterwards, I've been very fast to detect cones material constructing and I feel that a speakers sounds depend up to 95% of the cone design. Regular tweeters is extremely distorted, whether it's expensive or not. Some claims that this distortion is similar to the distortion from regular air.Īll sound is distorted due to airs molecyles. Test based on humans, seems that we, humans, prefer 2 harmonic distortion. Solid amp has third harmonic distortion and SE amp high 2 harmonic. I've never heard a smooth solid amp on such - sorry, that's it.(they might excist?) Very hard to work in audio due to high internal loss. I can't pass along my crossover designs unfortunately because I'm sharing this project with a couple of other people and that would be proprietary information, but the Pioneer crossovers would probably work better with their horns anyway (I've been experimenting with alternative horns to get different radiation characteristics).īeryllium has 3-4 times higher stifness/weight than titanium and aluminium. If you're interested in purchasing some TAD parts I might be able to help you get a pretty good price. Actually you can probably do a bit better than the originals - I think there's some room for improvement in the cabinet itself. On the other hand, they do sell the crossover networks for the 24, which are similar single-woofer speakers. Unfortunately, TAD does not sell the crossover network for the 2401, so it would be difficult to clone that speaker. I would think you could build an excellent home-brew speaker using TAD parts. Unfortunately it won't be cheap, but it won't have a ridiculous markup either. If I ever do "get it right", hopefully a commercial product will result. So far I'd have to characterize my own work with TAD drivers as "prototyping" - I have yet to build an identical pair of loudspeakers using TAD components. Thanks for the information on the sound quality and presentation of the 2401's. ![]()
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