Eminent Technology LFT8B’s reversing woofer polarity


Hi,

I have a pair of the Eminent Technology LFT8B’s and read Dr. Robert E Greene review in the Absolute Sound magazine (2014 I believe) of the speakers where in the review he reversed the polarity of the woofers and said it made a significant improvement. He was going to give the speakers a mediocre review (his words) before doing this and after reversing the woofer polarity he then said they were significantly better and proceeded to give them a rave review. Have any LFT8B owners out there ever tried this? Thank you.

Scot
scothurwitz
Hi all

Regarding the amp requirements to properly drive the LFT8B’s, too many people worry about having enough watts per channel. My experience has taught me that the quality of the amp is much more important than the watts per channel.

I had a Cambridge stereo amp on them (200 wpc) and it was good. Not knocking Cambridge, they make a nice amp, but when I switched to the Pass Labs XA30.8 and heard it for the first time, I laughed out loud. That amp, on paper, is rated at only 30 watts per channel (solid state) but it’s all power supply. The thing weighs 84 lbs, it’s rated at 30 wpc @ 8 ohms, 60 wpc @ 4 ohms & 120 wpc @  2 ohms and it still has 12 dB of headroom! It’s a class a design. That amp drives those LFT8B’s effortlessly and always sounds incredibly musical. Watts per channel means nothing. 

bdp24

Thanks for mentioning the Audiophiliac show on YouTube, I’ll definitely check it out. 

Regarding the Mye stands for the LFT8B’s, I’ll bet he doesn’t have any pictures on his website yet, mine were the 1st pair he’s built. If you look at the pictures of the stands for the Magnepan 3.7’s you’ll get the idea, it’s basically the same stand. I’ll try to get a picture posted on this website (if Agon will allow it).

I also forgot to mention the most important attribute of the stands, the upright braces that attach from the back of the stand to the sides of the 60” panel. The upright braces prevent the panel from moving forward or backwards when the music is playing. HUGE IMPROVEMENT. To test the stability of the panel, I put my finger on top of the panel and tried moving it forwards and backwards, it felt like it was anchored to the floor, no movement whatsoever. The biggest benefit is image stability. The instruments within the soundstage are now precisely placed and pinpoint and rock solid. The improvement is off the charts. Background details are much better. Background voices are more intelligible. On familiar recordings you hear things you never knew were there. Everything is much more open. Like I said in my original posting, a must hear for anyone who owns these speakers. No negative, all positive.

I also prefer a Planar magnetic driver to any dynamic driver. It’s a simple matter of physics. The heavier dynamic driver will never start and stop as quickly as the planar drivers. I’ve owned Magico’s, Avalon’s, and the list goes on, some of them costing more than 10x the price of the LFT8B’s. I obviously prefer the LFT8 B’s. The fact that they only cost $2500.00 pair is a gift. Thank you Bruce Thigpen! Take care.

Scot
Scot,

very important information that  you are sharing. The flexing of the panels adversely affect sound quality. I believe retrofitting  vertical bracing to the sound anchor stands that I am using would be another solution. 
There is a guy on the Planar Speaker Asylum who has run a brace between his pair of Magneplanar Tympani T-IVa and the wall behind them. He says that has resulted in a noticeable increase in not only sound quality, but also increased bass out of the twin woofer panels. Grant offers a stand for the T-IV, but it costs as much as I paid for my pair of that loudspeaker!

@scothurwitz: There is no pic of the LFT-8b stand on the Mye Sound website, nor is it listed on the pricing page. I emailed Grant to see if he took a pic of the pair he made for you. May I contact you via email, and bother you for a pic or two? Thanks---Eric.

I remain astonished at the fact that many more people own Magnepan 1.7's than the LFT-8b. Eminent Technology is a very low-profile company, as are a number of my other favorite hi-fi brands (Music Reference, EAR Yoshino, Townshend, London, GR Research, Rythmik). Buying the LFT-8b requires a leap of faith for people without an ET dealer nearby. I luckily had one such: Brooks Berdan Ltd. in Monrovia, CA. Brooks chose the LFT-8b as his magnetic-planar loudspeaker, and steered me towards it (and towards Music Reference). Thanks Brooks, miss ya buddy :-( . 
While I am sure the Mye stands are excellent, there is another person who also makes stands for Maggies. The company is Magnarisers and while I do not own Maggies I was impressed enough with the stands and their price that I contacted him to make stands for my Acoustat Model 2 speakers (sans interface as I use the direct drive amps). He did a great job for a reasonable price and there was a noticeable improvement getting them off the floor.
@clio09: Yeah, the Magnariser's are a great value. Their Maggie stands are a simplified and lighter weight version of the stand Sound Anchors has for years been making. The difference between the Sound Anchors and Magnariser Maggie stands and the Mye is obviously the Mye providing bracing 2/3rds the way up the panel height, in effect stiffening the rather flimsy MDF frame the Maggie drivers are mounted in.

In contrast, the Eminent Technology LFT drivers have a stiff metal frame onto which they are bolted. That frame is then mounted into a cut out in the speaker's MDF baffle. Supporting and stiffening that MDF baffle can be only a good thing!