Have you or roxy even heard the Forte III
Yes I owned them for 4 mts got them cheap, as they were a good turnaround to make money on. A friend owned the older version, bass wasn’t as good/low on them.
Cheers George
Vandersteen 3A Sigs vs Klipsch Forte III
Since the spatial info is encoded in the signal, somebody walk me thru the physics of how a big baffle improves the image ? you do get the bounce off the panel and the back wall is 100% distortion.... but have at it, math gets extra credit the same applies to focusing energy with a horn, ain’t nothing free..... remember, I own horns, listen to them every day, I can assure you depth of image is not on my list of things they do well.... i will I’ll accept the homework assignment to go in and put a constrained layer damping treatment on the horn body, |
tomic601"Since the spatial info is encoded in the signal, somebody walk me thru the physics of how a big baffle improves the image ? you do get the bounce off the panel and the back wall is 100% distortion...." No it is not 100% distortion because recordings are made, mixed and mastered to be played over a loudspeaker in some kind of room except lousy recordings that are made to be played in a car although I am not sure that is common practice in the industry today. |
@tomic601 No math required. In my particular experience, it's very easy to hear. I'm not saying wide baffles are inherently better at imaging. I'm sure the opposite is often true, but my experience tells me it's not a universal rule. Some of the best speakers I've heard, regardless of price, have massive baffles. Anyway, I agree that in the case of Klipsch Heritage speakers, great imaging isn't exactly their forte. |