Sean wrote:
>>As far as naming specific speakers go, that would be hard to do, especially in stock form. >>Can you point me to a well designed speaker that offers coherent arrival of the sound, >>linear in frequency response without major abberations, offers minimal ringing at any given >>frequency while producing good bass extension? Quite honestly, i can't think of a single >>modern day product that meets that criteria.
I can recommend one in STOCK form, which you might already know of. Green Mountain Audio C1.5i. Here are a portion of the specs from the user manual:-
Type: Sealed box design with minimum baffle
Phase Shift: +10 degrees @ 150Hz
-10 degrees @ 8KHz
+/- 1 degree 250Hz – 6KHz
Xover Type: single-element, 1st order (6dB/oct) parallel Butterworth electrical & acoustical
Xover Freq: 350Hz & 3KHz
Polarity: Non-inverting
I'm sure that there are others but these speakers I can recommend highly thru personal experience. NOTE: no affiliation of any way, shape or form with GMA. Merely a customer.
Other than this, I agree with Sean's thread. With TWL's explanation. I arrived at the same conclusion myself. It's too blooming bad that the 1st question people ask after hearing a system is "where's the bass?". It's all in there, old chap, you ain't listenin'! After reading this thread I'm reminded of the LP I have by Milt Jackson "Ain't But a Few of Us Left"!
>>As far as naming specific speakers go, that would be hard to do, especially in stock form. >>Can you point me to a well designed speaker that offers coherent arrival of the sound, >>linear in frequency response without major abberations, offers minimal ringing at any given >>frequency while producing good bass extension? Quite honestly, i can't think of a single >>modern day product that meets that criteria.
I can recommend one in STOCK form, which you might already know of. Green Mountain Audio C1.5i. Here are a portion of the specs from the user manual:-
Type: Sealed box design with minimum baffle
Phase Shift: +10 degrees @ 150Hz
-10 degrees @ 8KHz
+/- 1 degree 250Hz – 6KHz
Xover Type: single-element, 1st order (6dB/oct) parallel Butterworth electrical & acoustical
Xover Freq: 350Hz & 3KHz
Polarity: Non-inverting
I'm sure that there are others but these speakers I can recommend highly thru personal experience. NOTE: no affiliation of any way, shape or form with GMA. Merely a customer.
Other than this, I agree with Sean's thread. With TWL's explanation. I arrived at the same conclusion myself. It's too blooming bad that the 1st question people ask after hearing a system is "where's the bass?". It's all in there, old chap, you ain't listenin'! After reading this thread I'm reminded of the LP I have by Milt Jackson "Ain't But a Few of Us Left"!

