+1 Vahes but I would add that an exponentional horn tweeter can be substituted by a BIG beefy mid range and a conventional tweeter. Horns work great but there are a few powerful non-compression mid drivers out there.
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If you google JBL 4350 you will see the full specs. The lower end has two 15" driver that extend up to 250Hz. The upper end is three way with its own passive crossover, starting from 250 to 1.1Hz a big beefy 12" cone driver does the honors, above that and up to 9kHz a 2" compression driver, and above 9kHz to 21kHz another ultra high compression driver. I use two 200W power amps for the high and low ends along with an electronic crossover set at 250Hz. |
@analogluvr Phusis I just checked out Simon mears and those look like some beautiful speakers you have! I bet they sound fabulous! Thank you, and yes - I find they are marvelous sounding speakers. In the words of reviewer Kevin Fiske, if I may: ... there is no co-driver interference between the three elements of the Ucellos and the integration is clean and seamless. I heard absolutely no sense of cupping with voices – and that, I am told, is frequently a trait exhibited by horns. And the Ucellos’ dynamic range is simply extraordinary. They have a matchless ability to portray the softest, most subtle information on recordings, then in the next millisecond almost blast you out of your listening chair with a crescendo so fast and so loud it feels as if it might wake the dead. https://www.dagogo.com/simon-mears-audio-ucello-3-way-horn-loudspeaker-review/ |
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