the Mike Powell silver fuse (not actually a fuse) and silver jumpers made a very good improvement for my LRS...
Magnepan .7 vs 1.7 tech question?
Two questions,
1. Hopefully someone can help. Does anyone know if a change of fuse to a Magnepan .7 and 1.7 can be placed in order to add more sparkle/treble to the top end? The fuses that come with them appear to do the opposite. Is this possible?
2. I’ve heard a couple of rumors that the 1.7 needs more power/current than the .7 yet the specs of 86db efficiency and 4 ohm load are the same. Opinions greatly appreciated.
No @rankaudio, of the current Magnepans only the 3.7i, 20.7i, and 30.7 have ribbon tweeters. My Magneplanar Tympani T-IVa does as well, but has not been in production for decades. A lot of people---including Steve Guttenberg in his LRS review---incorrectly call all Maggies ribbon speakers (part of the blame for that rests with Magnepan. LRS is short for Little Ribbon Speaker, which it is NOT). Except for the ribbon tweeter in the above models, ALL Magnepan drivers are magnetic-planars, not ribbons. Magnetic-planars, electrostatics, and ribbons are all planars, but not all planars are ribbons. A ribbon driver is by definition one in which the moving element (in the case of Maggies that is the mylar diaphram) is also the conductor. The Magnepan magnetic-planar drivers have wire conductors glued onto the mylar diaphram. That is NOT a ribbon. A classic full-range ribbon loudspeaker is the no longer in production Apogee. |
I had always thought it was the resistor that cut some of the high end. I've never had a problem with 1.7, 1.7i or 3.7i on the tip end. I have alternated between wire and resistors as a jumper which will change the top end . You do need an amp with plenty of power and available output amperage. Hope that helps. Happy Holidays |
I hope you meant to type incorrect. !.7s and newer are all quasi ribbons, except for the 3, 20, and 30 series, which are true ribbons. |
You are right the new models don't have wires glued to the mylar anymore, it's a printed circuit now. You might call the panels all quasi-ribbons now but due to history of those particular loudspeakers you still can call them planer-magnetic and not be wrong.
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