Sloped baffle


Some great speakers have it, some don't. Is it an important feature?
psag
Bombaywanker, the Vandersteen 2 are time and phase conherent.

And that surely does not make it a state of the art speaker, like it makes no speaker state of the art.

Yes, I do doubt your experience and you sure sound like a guy with no technical education and little technical aptitude. Anyone who is fixated on one aspect of design and thinks it guarantees something is usually one who has little technical experience or knowledge. Someone who has experience and physics and engineering in his background always knows designs never hinge on one parameter or feature.

Usermanual and some others have it right, they recognize that this thread is only talking about one aspect of speaker design.
Just saw this thread. Wonderful to have so many knowledgeable folks chime in, plus the links to very good past discussions.

I'm certainly not up to par with my two cents here, but Psag might find it useful. Uli Brueggemann, the man behind Acourate DSP/DRC software, wrote this article on crossovers you are likely to find enlightening. It is in layman's terms: http://files.computeraudiophile.com/2013/1202/XOWhitePaper.pdf

Not sure what your system configuration is. Mine is based 100% on a computer server as source, which allows a neat approach - in my view, of course:

One way to achieve time and phase alignment is to use a multi-amped system (someone already said this above), having one amp directly driving a driver (no passive crossover used), and having a multichannel DAC and DSP software such as Acourate. Acourate allows to set digital crossovers and set time delays. So you can achieve time alignment without a sloped baffle.
Here's a great setup article http://www.computeraudiophile.com/content/556-advanced-acourate-digital-xo-time-alignment-driver-linearization-walkthrough/

I'm starting to go down this route, although I'm still coming to terms with the notion of the benefits of a time and phase aligned system where the amps are driven directly by a DAC (with the drawbacks of the latter) outdoing the benefits of my Lamm preamp driving the amp.

BTW, would like to ask a side question taking the advantage of so many knowledgeable guys reading this thread: following the above, my thoughts are of eventually replacing my speakers with DIY speakers using premium drivers, without passive XO, and enclosed in a DIY cabinet (I'm rather skilled at that). It seems premium driver (top Raal, Accuton, scanspeak, etc) can be had for relative low prices (compared to speakers that carry them). Does this sound like a good plan, or am I missing a significant issue??

Great thread!
Lewinskih01, your plan is great. There is so much info about making speakers in real texts, you will be surprised that it is not magic. First thing, yes, use the best drivers you can. Check out Audio Technology, they are some of the absolute best.

And sure, the prices are low compared to finished speakers.

Cabinets are time consuming, finishing is time consuming, this labor has to be accounted for to the tune of $100 per hour or so, all parts have to have markups, there is dealer markup. Without any gouging, prices escalate quickly.

You will learn so much in a diy endeavor, and you will end up with a good set of speakers if you research and execute well.

Start reading the DIY forum. You will find a number of folks who really know what they are talking about. Fewer "know it alls", But lots of guys who really do things.
07-05-14: Kiddman
Yes, I do doubt your experience and you sure sound like a guy with no technical education and little technical aptitude. Anyone who is fixated on one aspect of design and thinks it guarantees something is usually one who has little technical experience or knowledge. Someone who has experience and physics and engineering in his background always knows designs never hinge on one parameter or feature.
listen, Kidboy, if you think that I have no technical education or background then you are deeply negative in that area! I had a good laugh when I read the above...
the more you write, the more you put your foot into your mouth. At this point you've swallowed your 1st foot & your 2nd foot is well on its way down. Like I wrote before, you are totally clueless on this subject matter.
Time-coherence is not a "parameter or feature" of speaker design; it's a speaker design philiosophy. The designer 1st decides if his/her speaker is going to be time-coherent or not. Based on this decision, he/she selects drivers, x-over topology & then determines to solve all the other issues in designing that speaker under the umbrella of time-coherence.
You are far from getting that this concept. I suggest that you change your moniker to 'more_than_clueless' (BTW, you are the one who started insulting various Audiogon members & I'm just returning the favour as I wont sit back & take your sh$$. you are a most unsavoury fellow who doesn't know how to debate a topic without insulting people. That's why I wrote - if you are going to uncivil, go find another place to waste your time. Other Audiogon members do have disagreements but we all try our best to remain civil).

the Vandersteen 2 are time and phase conherent.

And that surely does not make it a state of the art speaker, like it makes no speaker state of the art.
And, look at your depth of knowledge on display here to the rest of the A'gon community! Your writings repeatedly say that just because the Vandersteen 2 model sounds bad that selecting time-cohrerent as a design "parameter" will not make any speaker sound its best. Wow! diffident mentality here. The Vandy 2 is a really old model speaker & it's very possible that Vandersteen was limited by the driver technology available back then. It's only recently that he started drivers made to his spec - maybe he realized the limitations of what was available to him commercially? I know that a lot of the manuf who make very good drivers have stopped selling them to the public. I had a friend who owned a pair of Vandy 2 which I heard for a short period of time & long ago & not enough to make a judgement on their sound.
Once again, time-coherence is design philosophy & not a design parameter. have you heard any other time-coherent speaker? Or, are you basing all this on the Vandy 2 speaker?

Time coherent speakers are not easy to make esp. with cone drivers that's why you have very few manuf in this arena. Your pee-wee brain has informed you that it's because time-coherent speakers don't sound good so manuf have dropped the idea. Wow! Perhaps it could be these speaker manuf incompetence in understanding time-coherence & translating that to a product that can be sold that has prevented them from manuf a time-coherence speaker?? Nah, that possibly cannot be the case, right??
Lewinskih01,
it appears that you are going down the path of (Boothroyd-Stuart) Meridian (the UK-based company). If you were able to stuff your amps into your speaker, you'd have an active loudspeaker like Meridian's along with your DSP x-over. OK, so now your are not listening to passive x-over components; you are now listening to the sound of your DSP software which is processing your music signal & creating delays to align the sonics at your ear/destination.
when it comes to using a DSP x-over another company called Emerald Physics is also using this concept. I've listening to their CS2 & CS3 speakers quite a bit - both at shows & at a dealer's place. Somehow I never took to their sonics. It also did not help that a new revision of the DSP x-over arrived every week or every couple of weeks with the pledge that it was an improvement over the prev rev.
IMO, with DSP x-over you sonics will be heavily influenced by the software (very much akin to having an oversampled/upsampled DAC - here again, the quality of the sonics is heavily dependent on the upsampling/oversampling algorithm. You already know for yourself that there are some oversampling/upsampling DACs you like & others you do not).
I personally think that it's much easier to overcome the sonic short-comings of passive x-over components than it is of the DSP software.
At any rate this post was to cite the trade-offs (which I'm sure you already know).
I applaud your effort, which is a big one - biamping or triamping & getting all delays & phase of the music signal correctly lined up. I sincerely wish you all the best. Do keep us Audiogon members posted on your progress.

It seems premium driver (top Raal, Accuton, scanspeak, etc) can be had for relative low prices (compared to speakers that carry them).
what is your definition of "premium drivers"? Cost of the driver? Cost of a commercial speaker using this driver? The marketing hype surrounding that driver that makes you believe it must be the best?
From the little I know, some Scanspeak drivers are very good performance that would qualify for time-coherence.
Accuton drivers need not apply for time-coherence.
I don't know much about Raal.
Be careful how you choose your drivers - don't let cost be the judge - look at their freq bandwidth & where you intend to cross them over. FWIW.