Hahahaha. Hahahhaah. Hahahhaa.
I’m laughing because I may be the only person on earth who knows what happened, because most modern speaker designers have never seen it.
What he probably did was swap out electrolytics for film (a good thing) that were parallel to the woofer. As a result, he lowered the ESR without compensating with the appropriate resistor.
If they are gone, measure the speaker impedance and compare to the Stereophile measurements. You’ll see a gnarly dip. Add R until that goes away.
If you can do neither, add R in 0.5 Ohm increments. Usually you want around a total of 1.5 to 2 Ohms (existing resistor + ESR).
You owe me a bottle of tequila.
Best,
E
I’m laughing because I may be the only person on earth who knows what happened, because most modern speaker designers have never seen it.
What he probably did was swap out electrolytics for film (a good thing) that were parallel to the woofer. As a result, he lowered the ESR without compensating with the appropriate resistor.
If they are gone, measure the speaker impedance and compare to the Stereophile measurements. You’ll see a gnarly dip. Add R until that goes away.
If you can do neither, add R in 0.5 Ohm increments. Usually you want around a total of 1.5 to 2 Ohms (existing resistor + ESR).
You owe me a bottle of tequila.
Best,
E