Translate

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Dynaco A25 Speakers

My second set of Dynaco's after the A35's is the smaller brother the A25.

I enjoyed the A35's when I had them and found them best suited to a Solid State amplifier, these A25's I feel are the same. They do  not pair up well with tube gear.



There is plenty of information on these speakers and they were proven to be wildly popular in the 70's for good reason.

These have wonderful SEAS drivers in them and are extremely well built with a mid century modern wood finish.



Klipsch Tangent 30 Speakers

I came across my first pair of Klipsch speakers today, the Tangent 30.



The Tangents were Klipsch's mass market speakers for those who could not afford the Heritage line.

This speaker uses two 8" woofers in a sealed box and a horn compression tweeter. Super efficient at 96db these will work well with my tube amps. The cabinets are well built with real wood veneer and weigh in at 45lbs each.

So far I have had a few songs on these and I like what I hear. Granted I am a fan of horn tweeters mow. The dual 8" woofers have pretty good, tight bass response.

The Tangents were built between 1989 and 1991 and the focus was on clear sound, which when paired with a tube amp, these are very clear.




Monday, June 12, 2017

Mission 717 Speakers

Always a soft spot for early Farad Azima and brother Henry Azima Mission speakers.

This pair of white faced Mission 717 came up locally and I could not resist buying these beauties. The white faced with the Mission logo are my favorite generation of Missions.




This matched pair was in exceptionally good condition and just needed a light sanding to the cabinet and a coating of really nice wood oil.

The drivers for this pair are made with Franch Saire woofers and Audex tweeters. The woofers will never need to be re foamed.

There is a great article at audio4maniacs on the history of these white baffled Missions and it is worth reading to see what Henry and Farad where shooting for in the development of this speaker line.

I have had two other pairs of the white baffled Mission 700 speakers and I like these much better due to the French drivers.

Here is the original brochure form the 80's on these speakers.


At 92db sensitivity these are good for the tube amp.

I like early Mission loudspeakers and have had many over the years. They are very alive and musical with great dynamic range.

I have had a lot of speakers over the years and Missions are one of my favorites, there is something about them and I love having them.

Saturday, June 3, 2017

Clements 300SI Redeux

Another pair of Clements 300SI or Spacial Image came my way today, my first experience was from a reader of this blog that had a pair and wanted to see how they sounded versus the NAD Model 30's.

His pair of speakers are in this write up here.

This is the pair I picked up today which look like an earlier version than his.




These are a little pair of speakers has a huge sound from a little 6 1/2 inch woofer that uses a transmission line enclosure. Bass is really deep for such a diminutive size.

The imaging is pretty impressive with a large spacial sound stage.

These need to be run with a solid state amp and I have them hooked up to a Harmon Kardon HK 395i 35WPC receiver. Both the SE tube amp and push/pull do not run enough power to get the best out of these little speakers.

These are nice Canadian audiophile speakers that really fly under the radar except for those in the know.




Thursday, June 1, 2017

Tannoy Oxford Gold Open Baffles

I decided to open baffle this pair of cabinet distressed Tannoy Oxford Gold's. The original boxes were definitely worse for wear and often I found the bass boxy if not boomy due to the ported design of these speakers.





I opted for a really nice 9 ply with Cherry wood veneer. I also decided to invert the tweeter under the woofer like early Mission 700 or 717 speakers.

This is the finished result.




Sound wise these speakers no longer sound confined to the box, bass is much tighter and cleaner but not as low as when in the box. The mid range is more open as the woofer seems to handle most if not all of the mid range frequencies.

Aesthetically these speakers are my best project to date, I love the look of them and the pictures on this site do not give the speakers real justice.


Sunday, April 30, 2017

JVC R-S5 Receiver

Early 1980's 27 watts per channel silver faced JVC receiver arrived today in mint condition.





This looks like it as in between the JVC JR-S300 and the JVC R-S33 class A receiver.

At 27 watts per channel perhaps build quality and sound was more important then gizmo's and gadgets as per the other two JVC receivers listed above.

This unit is pretty simple and clean looking. Best of all is the 90db sensitivity to the phono section.

Full specs are as follows courtesy of HiFi Engine

Specifications

Tuning range: FM, MW
Power output: 27 watts per channel into 8Ω (stereo)
Frequency response: 20Hz to 20kHz
Total harmonic distortion: 0.03%
Signal to noise ratio: 90dB (MM)
Speaker load impedance: 4Ω (minimum)

Thursday, April 20, 2017

The Journey to Open Baffles and Tube Amps

This blog is a journey into the wonders of hi fidelity. As I travel this path it opens up more and more.

My first memories of hi fi was my dads dynaco tube amp that he built with a pair of AR3 speakers. He had a cassette deck and I used to listen to Simon and Garfunkel Bridge Over troubled Waters over and over through a set of headphones.

My first real stereo was a JVC PC-11, half boom box half component stereo. It was around 20WPC and was pretty cool at the time.


Later I bought a Pioneer turntable to go with this system.

My first set of speakers was a pair of Mission 700S and  we had that connected to a JVC JR-S301 and then some sort of Sansui amp. Both the JVC and the Sansui were great at frying the Vifa tweeters in my missions at that time. Heavy fingers on the volume.

My first decent receiver was a Harmon Kardon HK 380i, a step up in sound and lots of head room. I stopped blowing tweeters.

Next came a Rotel RA-840B amp that ran 40WPC, I chose this over the AR Cambrige A60, although in retro spec I should have bought the AR.I had the Rotel for many years and just recently sold it in the past couple of years.

My next great pair of speakers was a pair of Energy 22's which I had for at least 20 years of which has seen some time on this blog.

It was the first tube amp that really sent me down the rabbit hole. The fidelity you get from 1 or 2 watts per channel can put the biggest monster receivers to shame.

Since being bitten by the tube bug, I have not really cared for solid state stuff and pretty much pass over most of it unless there is an end game for the stuff I pick up.

The tube amp has opened the door to speakers and their design.

In my journey I have found that the early well designed speakers from KLH or EPI with minimal crossovers are the best, after all in is signal in and signal out. Keeping the path of least resistance is the key.

When running a tube amp, speakers need to be over 90db in efficiency and the higher the better.
Another thing I found is horns in the mid range and tweeters give incredible clarity of which paper or domes can not. Some can come close.

Now I am finding that open baffle speakers are really clean in sound and the reason speaker were ever put in a box was to make them a piece of furniture that a wife could like. The bass in an open baffle is really clean as if the box imparts plenty of resonance, colouration and a myriad of other problems.

Open Baffles need a special room or space to work properly. A few things I have discovered in the open baffles is Alnico drivers work best, minimum of a 10" woofer is needed, a 3-5" full range is optimal for the mid range, preferably open in the back to get the proper refraction. I tend to like a horn tweeter to top the music off.

Of the open baffles that I have built to date this Foster Open Baffle is stunning in its' sound. I had to tame the tweeter down a bit with a resistor. The little Foster 8F3 full range is spectacular, a massive open sound stage is presented while the bass is really articulate, tight and clean with the 25E33.




So as the journey continues I have decided to sell off many of my boxed speakers and will concentrate on building what I think from my ears and years of experience some vintage cool efficient open baffles.

Stay tuned I have about six unique designs in my head and the drivers to create the path into this wonderful hobby.

I leave you some things to read and ponder.

Linkwitz Lab conclusion on OB versus box speakers.

Hawthorne Audio on the Art and Science of Open Baffle speakers.

Speaker Projects.

Good luck on your journey and I hope if you read this far try a tube amp some day and if you get the chance a really nice pair of open baffles.