And liked a bit of Lionel Ritchie (Oh-oh what a feeling, I got speakers in the ceiling) :)
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The 512TR was, and still is, my favourite Ferrari of all time. I just love the 'modified' Testarossa looks. Quite quick at 192mph too. But of course, it's all about the noise and sense of occasion with these cars.
https://i.ibb.co/PTwYVGv/4-C056-C72-...DAF031-A0.webp
https://i.ibb.co/y0sqCQ4/2-E699-E5-E...A7-C8-B157.jpg
@peterdh, Hi Peter there are a number of reasons the tweeter is sometimes mounted below the midbass unit. Let's look at one of them, addressing your reasoning on this. Consider the distance between your ears! As part of your survival system that difference allows you to accurately locate the position of a possible threat, say a twig or branch being broken in a tree. The tiny delta provides both the azimuth and declination of that sound or threat.
Music is all about timing and is one of the reasons why room treatment makes such a huge improvement in sound. When the sound is prevented from chaotically banging around and taking too long to decay the ear/brain relationship can now better distinguish the spatial clues.
I thought that was a Toyota MR2..
Got my new subwoofer woofing very nicely, less connections to mess up .... 😀
The B&W DM2 are built upside down (bass on top then tweeter then supertweeter at the bottom), but they were originally sold with a metal "armchair" that tilted the speakers back so they fired at an angle towards the ceiling. Unfortunately, my stands are missing.
I also have a pair of B&O redstripe speakers that sit on the floor with a metal stand to let them angle upwards. The sound appears to come from about 4 foot off the floor. I sit within 8 feet of the speakers when I listen. I cannot remember which way up the drivers are though.
I used to have a pair of Mission 751s: I always assumed the reason for the tweeter being below ear level was that this configuration took away some of its harshness.
Having the tweeter below the main driver was largely a fashion thing at the time I think, although there can be sensible reasons to do this. It can help ameliorate the effects of poorer quality tweeters and sometimes does have time alignment benefits. There are other tricks that can seem to benefit the sound, have you noticed that speakers with backward sloping baffles seem well received? Reference 3a and Spica spring to mind, amongst others.
[QUOTE=Filterlab;1258862]The 512TR was, and still is, my favourite Ferrari of all time. I just love the 'modified' Testarossa looks. Quite quick at 192mph too. But of course, it's all about the noise and sense of occasion with these cars.
Still looking good. Nice photos.
My other 512 story is........ when I was growing up in the South East I used to cycle round the posh villages with my camera looking for sports cars.
If I found one on a driveway I'd swallow hard, knock the door and ask if I could take pictures in exchange for washing the motor. Most folks were very friendly and I made sure I did a good job. A few took me out for a spin.
The 512 in question was a beautiful metallic powder blue. The guy who opened the door looked a bit nervous but said ok to the fotos, no wash required, but "be quick before my wife notices".
I laughed, thinking he was joking. 30 seconds later I was threatened with a garden rake.