Welcome! Need support, you got it. Or share you ideas and experiences.
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In Reply to: Re: Which tweeter are you using? And what capacitor? nt. posted by doughter on January 26, 2007 at 06:38:10:
Hi,please give me detailed informations about your setup (room, placement, electronics, cables), maybe there is a more satisfying solution than lowering the tweeter- level. You also can send me a p.n..
Regards
Robert Bastani
Follow Ups:
Thanks Robert in offering to diagnose my system as you never fail to lend your time with Bastanis owners and may email you for your recommendations on improving my system.I would still like to ask for opinions if the single resistor in series is the only method to help with what should be a cheap fun experiment and in the end most likely probably wouldn't be a permanent implementation.
Hi,a series- resistor is a quick- fix, you can mount it with a plug, so it is easy removable when you like to listen to your hq- records. You can try a single series- resistor (10W) per tweeter of one Ohm up to two Ohms, when you need additional lowering you better use two resistors and assemble a dividing- network. A single resistor of one Ohm reduces the tweeter- level about 2Db, a single resistor with a high value (above 2 Ohms) doesn`t add much additional lowering but changes the crossover- point of the tweeter.
This quick- fix will help you like medicine which doesn`t cure the desease but surpresses the symptoms a little, so i recommend to follow a path which makes the poor recorded songs sound ok. and the good ones even better than now. For this i need detailed informations and your feedback when you followed my advice. This also cost you time only, you can try everything from my product- line like any other customer on return- terms.Regards
Robert Bastani
I'll give the resistor(s) a try and folow up with the results.I suspect the product you mention is the Magic Twins. Are they a specific frequency cut off/limiter and does it work in the area where hot cymbals live. If so I do like the idea of a specific frequency correction approach and may try it as well.
Hi,
there are many possibilities for harsh sound - from the source itself, the pre- amp, amp, cabling, power- cords, everything counts. The overall quality of your stereo is dependent on the weakest part of the chain. Especially when you have Prometheus with the Gemini- tweeters these speakers show you everythinng which is not harmonic like a lens - when everything is fine (this is not a matter of money, for example a Sony PS1 and a NAD 3020 connected with the Bastanis diy- cables to Prometheus sound fine - of course not on the same level as a highend 300B- setup but musical and satisfying) you get fascinating sound without getting disturbed by harshness or anything else which nobody would expect at this price- level.
There are Magic Twins filterelements for I/C- connections and a different type for speaker- use, these filters doesn`t touch anything in the audio frequency- spectrum but depending on the setup they offer big benefits, especially a natural de- stressed response in combination with more details. There are probably additional or completely different changes to make you satisfied, my experience is that a good stereo- "chain" always offers natural sound AND resolution of fine details, this is the path i recommend. Lowering the tweeter- level offers less listening- stress with poor recorded CD`s but the disharmony in your setup will not be cured. You can try everything from the Bastanis product- line which i recommend for your setup for two weeks before you decide if it`s worth the money in your setup or not.Regards
Robert Bastani
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