single driver speakers can do good only on vocals and string quartets.
nothing else will be sounding up to par no matter whatcha do.
nothing else will be sounding up to par no matter whatcha do.
single driver speakers
@czarivey I heard the Cube Audio Magus speakers at AXPONA, they were playing a lot of old-school jazz and big-band (Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, etc). It sounded great - a lot more bass than you'd expect from a single-driver (the cabinets use quarter-wave transmission lines, so I'm sure that helped) and the treble was smooth and pleasant, I didn't feel like I was missing anything in the sound of the trumpets for example. I don't know how well they'd hold up to a full orchestral recording of Mahler's 2nd or Shostakovich's 5th, or if they'd be able to throw down some hard rock, I have a feeling that the single driver could easily get overtaxed if asked to reproduce a huge frequency range at high SPLs, but for what they were playing they sounded fantastic. |
@czarivey - 'single driver speakers can do good only on vocals and string quartets nothing else will be sounding up to par no matter whatcha do.' You have obviously not listened to the latest in single driver speakers. I also heard the Cube at AXPONA and agree with tutetibiimperes on how good they sounded. I have been the very happy owner of a pair of Omega Super Alnico Monitors, which are single driver speakers, and they are very good not only on 'small' music ranging from small acoustic combos, string quarters, Schumann vocal pieces, but also on 'larger' and more expansive music including Mahler (1st for me), Pink Floyd, the Who, and movie soundtracks (e.g., Pirates of Caribbean, Gladiator). Granted, one will not get the deepest vestiges of bass or sustained very high SPLs from a 6.5 inch driver, but they sure can convey an incredibly satisfying and realistic aural picture across a very wide spectrum of musical styles. You owe it to yourself to go out and hear what today's designers using single drivers are capable of achieving. |
This is the speaker for those who need more dynamics/SPL. The Super Alnico High Output is not a 2 way design, but a 1.5 way design. What separates it from a 2 way design? The drivers are identical exept for the dustcap of the low frequency (LF) driver. There is no power sucking, midrange muddying crossover. The LF driver is cut off at 200Hz, so there is no phase and time misalignment as in a two way speaker. The HF driver still functions as a single driver, single point source running full range. 2 drivers work less hard as 1 driver. Same combined surface area as a 9.5" single driver. Higher efficiency (97dB) More dynamic performance than a single driver. Will play louder than a single driver. Will handle more complex music than a single driver and is just as fast. Super Alnico High Output Specifications Sensitivity: 97 dB Impedance: 4-6 ohms Driver: Twin Proprietary 6.5" Omega Alnico HempCone (1 whizzer, 1 dustcap) Frequency Response: 35-20kHz Dimensions: (without spikes) 38"H x 9"W x 14"D Weight: 50 lbs. each in a shipping box Power Requirements: as little as 2 watts Crossover: None |