Seek out Don Sachs. He upgraded CW IV xovers and was ecstatic about it.
klipsch cornwall iv upgraded crossovers
I own a pair of cornwalls, amazing speakers they are paired with MC452 power and a MC 70 tube pre.I play cds only on a yamaha C2100. My question is I hear people talking about upgrades to the crossovers on the corns and softening the horns with sound tape . Do any of those changes work,one or the other and do they make it worthwhile. Would like input from anyone who has tried the upgrades and who they used
Crites does not make a xover for the CW IV. And even if they did, xovers are not what they do well. First hand experience here. @eoj4952 Contact Don through his website. He would probably be more than willing to share what he did, he's a good guy.
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I am a BIG proponent of damping horns, enclosures and woofer frames ( electronics as well ). A good YT video by the " The Boston Audiophile ", he shows you how he did his CW IVs, and it was based on my recommendation to him. I tried several crossovers with my Lascalas, and I just like the original design the best ( there were a few by Klipsch ). One after market crossover I tried, I heard more detail, but based on my musical taste, it was to clinical, and projected to much in my face. I go with what I like. BTW, Bob Crites ( RIP ), refreshes older crossovers, and for many listeners, has made them very happy. Enjoy ! MrD. |
eoj, you've heard discussion about upgrades to the CW IV crossover? I've read a number of favorable reviews of the IV, saying Klipsch mainly revised the crossover from the III. If you have the IVs they must be nearly new since that was just introduced not long ago. So I'm a little surprised if there are any number of upgrades already. |
The speakers are 7 months old about 70 to 100 hours on them. I'm new to the craziness.I paired the VI's with an old yamaha DSP1 not good . Found an old ADCOM555 made the dsp1 a preamp. Better but still not happy. Always liked MC got a tube preamp c70 .The DSP1 went back to the basement. WOW the VI's were starting to sound good. Walk into a repair shop spotted another adcom555. First mono and then bywired stereo. upgraded speaker wire and interconnects , added an old yamaha 100 watt sub. was very very good. But still wanted a mac amp, after some reading found a mc452. The sound was amazing, huge soundstage, the whole back of the room and 5 feet high. 3 times the adcoms. The point of this is every upgrade even little ones, they sounded better and better. So now I'm chasing sound. Tubes or upgrades not sure yet. Thanks for the input excepting all advice |
eon, thanks for the further background. I can believe you’ve discovered better performance from where you started. And of course that whets the sonic appetite for more. ;^) I was not familiar with The Boston Audiophile that MrD suggested. So I went to that site and found this interesting modification for the CW IV. It would be much simpler and less expensive than modifying the crossover.
Note that he also reviews a couple of amps and has a separate link about setup. I’ll just add that I have a Don Sachs line stage and believe he has a good ear and knows what he is doing. |
The upgrades are better quality caps and resistors and others . There's only one guy doing them that I could find on ebay . His reviews are good. He upgrades a lot of top brand speakers, they loved the upgrades . Problem is no reviews for the IV's. Sounded like I would be the ginny pig. IF I take a chance and lay out the 750. for the pair and don't like them. I would still have the originals . Or should I put that money toward a tube amp 275VI or really piss off my wife with the 1502 . I really like bi- wiring . Opinions welcomed |
I damped the mid and tweeter horns (Dynamat on the mid, Blue Tak on the tweeter). The improvement was immediate and well worth the time and relatively minimal cost. The sound was noticeably cleaner, smoother, and more relaxed. Supposedly damping the woofers offer similar benefits. Haven’t done anything to the crossover....yet.... Cheers.... |
@atlvalet Check out on YT " The Boston Audiophile ", Klipsch CW IV upgrade. My best, MrD. |
No, just no. I’m not wrapping my horns or doing any other ridiculous tweaks. I think the 4th gen Heritage lineup sounds great from the factory, the last thing I’m doing is trusting some diy audio fanboys over the engineers at Klipsch that have been refining these designs since the 50’s. If the horns needed dampening they would have addressed it by now. |
FYI, I exchanged emails with Don (he’s awesome, BTW), and in addition to the Dynamat on the horns, the crossover mod basically consists of replacing the cheap Chinese caps with VCap ODAMs (which I know Don has made clear he’s a fan of) and the sand resistor. |
@perkadin I mean, you may not like the DIY thing, but you can clearly hear the resonance in the horn. That horn is agitated as the sound waves cascade out of the horn. Now, is that enough to affect the sound? No idea. You'd need to test and/or listen. |
Modifications mean “tuning” the component to your taste and to work better with your other components. That means that any particular change may not be an improvement. Make sure that any change can be reversed. Damping horns is something easily done and reversed. Likewise, putting thin felt strips in the horn opening can be tried and reversed. If you are going with crossover modifications, make sure that the modifier gives you back the old parts so you or someone else can undo the change. The biggest change, most probably for the better, would be to find a suitable tube amplifier. Take your time hearing alternatives. I know it is a matter of taste and system synergy, but, I find the MC 275 mentioned as a suggestion to be less than mediocre, particularly given the price. There are many low power tube amps that would work well with these speakers. |
@atlvalet id be less skeptical if one of these charlatans had the conviction to post before and after videos so we could A/B the difference. And not a bunch of useless graphs like Danny. Actually A/B the before and after with various songs in a controlled test. I also have no idea what obvious horn resonance you are referring to. If it’s so obvious please try and isolate the sound and share with the group. Im sure the guys at Klipsch would also appreciate this discovery. As for things like “cheap Chinese” caps and crossover components, it’s the same rationale as generic cable vs pricey esoteric stuff, if the cheaper components do the job there isn’t much need to pay up, aside from placating a small, fickle group of audiophiles. |
Klipsch used cheap parts in the xover and the binding posts are a joke. Face it, most of their client base is not into truly high-end audio, so why spend on ultra-premium parts? It would make no business sense. Subbing in great parts makes these good speakers great. This I know for a fact, having done it and heard the difference, which was not subtle. |
@wrm57 so prove it. If it’s not subtle then it should be easy to demonstrate in a video comparison. Please note, I’m not expecting you to actually tear apart one of your speakers just to prove a point, but I think your claim is absolutely worthless without some type of demonstration. There are thousands of audio videos on YouTube, some of them with terrific A/B comparisons. But it’s almost always different speakers or different amps which show audible differences. I’ve never seen any audio tweak or cable videos with actual sound demos. I wonder why 🤔 |
It is true that low cost parts do not necessarily mean bad sound or a substantial compromise in sound quality. At its price point, the Cornwall cannot be built without some cost cutting and savvy design means making the right choices on where to use “cheap” parts. But, to suggest that those who substitute parts or modify the design to improve its performance or better suit their preference are just “fickle” and must meet some kind of blind testing criteria to justify their choice is unreasonable. First, it is a personal choice and does not have to meet a long term market-supported approval measure. Second, is there any evidence that Klipsch applied blind testing for every one of their design choices? I bet they do what most of us do; they listen to the results. I am sure Klipsch designers hear many improvements that they chose not to adopt because of cost, manufacturing difficulty, or some other practical consideration. Those consideration may not be in play to stop an individual from making a modification. |
Cleeds, It is not like using lossy MP3 videos,; it is MUCH worse. With any video you are hearing the gear in the video, the room, the recording gear, etc., before you even consider what the audience is using for playback. Even if the person shooting the video is a recording engineer, the sound would differ based on the technique employed. I also doubt that $5,000 microphones were used for the recording. I think you were being too kind in omitting words like “idiotic” in your put down of auditions via YT. |
Yep blame YouTube. Blame the recording equipment. Typical excuses. And some of those reviewers use very high end equipment and even include links to non compressed audio. What nobody seems to be willing to acknowledge is that these changes typically produce differences that are so subtle that it’s hard to even notice a change let alone conclude that they’ve made an improvement. While I’d love to be able to home demo everything that’s just not realistic. YouTube isn’t ideal but at least it’s something. My findings from dac comparisons conducted at home were very much in line with what I heard in YouTube videos. I’ve also found YouTube useful for most speakers and amps, but I still demo in person before purchasing whenever possible. |
I suppose it depends on what one calls “subtle” and “obvious,” but if something has to survive YT treatment to constitute a meaningful improvement, I will agree that most modifications won’t pass the test. It is up to each owner whether any improvement is worth the cost and effort. It is not up to some self-appointed expert on cognitive dissonance to shame those who find such changes desirable. |
@perkadin , wow, that's one mighty high horse you trot around on. Prove it to you? You've got to be kidding me. I've already proven it to myself. I have no interest in proving anything to you. The OP asked for the experiences of people who tried these mods. I saw no mention of wanting the opinions of self-important, bloviating skeptics who have not tried the mods but are nonetheless convinced they do not work. No one is selling anyone anything here, so please back off with your suspicions and sophomoric psychologizing. Closed minds, closed ears. Good luck with that.
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@wrm57 start with this Click here. You are fooling yourself if you think I’m the one being closed minded. Ive done a ton of blind testing. I make a conscious effort to be as objective as possible when it comes to evaluating gear. I don’t dismiss something as junk because it’s made in China or is less expensive or because some “expert” said so. I also consider behavioral explanations behind opinions. Do you? |
So, your comparisons of DACs on YT were scientifically controlled blind tests? You were able to verify that the person making the video properly controlled all variables and your own evaluation was blind and you had enough samples to reach some level of confidence in the results? I’ve participated in blind tests, including DACs, so I am confident that their are meaningful difference (though not at .05 confidence level), but, that does not mean everything outside of such testing is delusional. It is unfair to insist on blind testing to prove modifications are efficacious, while insisting that YT videos should be provided by modifiers when there is no evidence (blind testing?) that YT videos can make differences, or lack thereof, evident. |
@eoj4952 Check out my Video. Crites has the Xover Cap values online but never measured the Inductors. I changed everything and updated the Xover to include the Inductor Value. It's all in my Video,
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@rajugsw please tell me you have some before and after audio you can share. |
Actually never mind, I just found this guys video comparison Dynamat mod on Klipsch. Personally I think it sounded better before, less muffled. Yes, different speaker but I think I’ve gotten my answer on that particular mod, the difference was actually more pronounced than I was expecting. |
https://forum.audiogon.com/posts/2350554 I’m not sure why one would consider posting frequency response curves as the work of a charlatan...it’s literally measured data. I mean, I’m not making a purchasing decision based solely off data, but hey...that’s just me. |
As I said before, these modifications tune the speaker to fit the owner’s particular taste and system, and as such, the changes can be unfavorable. A local dealer in my area makes custom speaker systems (mostly horn-based) and tuning involves trying external damping of the horn, applying thin felt strips to the inside of the horn, changing the type and amount of damping to the sides of the cabinet, changing crossover parts based on a prospective buyer’s preference, etc. I get to hear these changes, and any one of them can result in dramatic changes. The issue I have with the kind of modifications mentioned in the video is that a lot of people assume that certain types of changes are always better—more damping is better, more expensive caps are better than cheap ones, etc. Additional cabinet damping might make the bass tighter, which one person may like, but someone else might find the sound to be too dry and lifeless. The type and brand of caps that sound good is likewise subjective. The custom builder I mentioned above thoroughly hates Mundorf caps in any of his speaker or electronic builds. If you ever heard the effect of even a tiny change in the level of the midrange and tweeter, you will appreciate the value of L-pad attenuators controlling such drivers. I don’t understand how manufacturers expect their designs to be optimized to the particular buyer’s taste and room acoustics such that such basic adjustment is not necessary. The removal of such controls has to be among the worse modern design trends; reversing this by adding back controls would probably be the best modification one can try. |
@larryi well said. Changes are not guaranteed to be improvements and there certainly seems to be a tendency towards more is better. That’s kind of where I was going with bringing cognitive dissonance into the conversation, it provides a behavioral explanation as to why a rational person might go down that path and then vehemently justify their choices. Personally I tend to “trust the chef” but I get why people like to tinker and modify, it’s a fun part of the hobby. Every room is different so it’s not like you can expect everything to be optimized straight from the factory. My mods tend to come through positioning and amplification. I don’t even like to use tone controls, but I see value in them along w advanced room correcting software. Mostly though I get annoyed when industry people overstate the value of these mods and the assumption that they will result in a noticeable improvement. |
Sorry to chime in late wasn't able to post because my address wasn't on file. But I dampen my IV's a year ago. I used Dynamat 1/4 inch tape .The sound improvement was clear and very obvious Warmer less squawking much easier to listen to I used to get tired of listening and yawning after 20 mins. The first thing I noticed, was I could listen for an hour without squirming. I stopped yawning and enjoyed favorite cuts with new enthusiasm. Damping involves 35$ and 2 hours of work .It's easy to do and I highly recommend it. And best of all if you don't like, it takes 20 mins. to reverse. I've seen the negativity on some post a lot goes in to good sound. Equipment decent wires room size and acoustics. But above all quality of recordings. Naysayers can say what they want but my IV's sound like Six's now. |
I looked into the upgraded crossovers . There's a store on ebay with good reviews. The problem was you had to take your crossovers out and ship them to him. He also had a long turnaround do to backlog of work. If I could have bought them outright, I would have taken a chance. But without the original crossovers to go back to NO. |
Perkadin, I agree with you that listeners tend to be biased to favor the “improvement” they invested in and may go overboard in a particular direction. You rarely hear someone say that a particular tweak made the sound worse when any such change should have a fair chance at being for worse. |
When first purchased, I listening to them in a prepared showroom .They were in my price range and I liked the sound. I didn't have hours to spend listening and comparing. And not all music made me yawn. I listen to mostly rock and roll 60s to 70s and 80s 100pct CD's I found that better quality recordings were amazing and ok ones weren't. but that's not the point Trying to make your system sound better is what we do, part of the hobby. My earlier tread in the beginning of this post, lists my changes in equipment and where I am today. I'm very happy with my system BUT always looking to improve it |
I find non damped horns unlistenable, particularly the metal / aluminum/ plastic type. Most wooden horns I have heard, do not have these issues. Been damping for 55 years, and there is " a sound " to the ringing / vibration to most horns. My clients have always appreciated the " improvements ". Enjoy, MrD |
@larryi , I am extremely sensitive to these nasties I speak of. I am interested to learn about what you have heard, that were made right. My best, MrD. |
I am a fan of the vast array of horns made by Yoshimura Laboratories (YL) when coupled to their compression drivers. They made metal horns, wood horns and some kind of resin; the horns come in all sorts of shapes and sizes, including horns almost the size of Western Electric 15A horns. But regardless of shape and size and configuration of the throat, they are consistently free of gross horn coloration—not nasal sounding nor shouty—and they sound smooth and relaxed (no sharp peaks). I also like a number of Western Electric horns and compression drivers. Some that sound good to me, like the 15A, are not very practical, but horns like the 32A, are nice sounding compact horns. I also like Western Electric compression drivers and the currently manufactured replicas by G.I.P. Laboratories. My own horns are Western Electric 12025 sectoral horns driven by Western Electric 713b drivers. Those drivers are very hard to find in matched pairs. My horns are metallic, but I have left them untreated. They are relatively compact but they are very heavy and the thick metal does not ring much. |