Description

Audio Hobby Thoughts, Philosophy & System Description 

Current Room Anchors - Room 1 and 2 active

Room 1 - Matrix 800's anchors -  for creating that ..........Maxell Tape Effect. 
Room 2 - (Adjacent to Room 1) - Quad 57 + two Dynaudio BM12s subs - Midrange reference
Room 3 - Acoustat Model 3 - Modded - upstairs - For imaging larger than life  (literally speaking) - see last picture. Unfortunately is next to my wifes TV room. So it gets limited use.
 
Stored - B&W Electrostatic DM70c Continental - Wife calls them the washing machines. John Bowers called them his favorite speaker.   Very interesting and very rare. Could anchor a room but they need special placement and lots of room. ESL portion needs to be 100% functional and at ear level or they will sound soft. 

Room 2 is mostly digital, guests, and used for trialing used unplayed records before they make the queue for room 1.  Room 1 has been called by my family as Dads Hole. I prefer panic room as it helped to raise my kids and stay married...so far. 

Psychology Part 

Music is critical to ones health and well being. I went through a couple stretches in life due to events without it and the results were not good. The goal for me to get lost in the music and have it transport me to that special place. Now whether you get there by a typical 2 channel home stereo with speakers, headphones, or other means is not important. Getting there is the important part.  

Audiophile not.....

Have always been the type that if I frequent a room enough, a system usually ends up in there. My wife finally put an end to this, and allows me to do what I want in the full basement of our house.....so..... In this described virtual system, I have had Room A since 1994. Adjacent Room B is in the process of being finished, but I have been using it for listening for a few years now adding in room treatments as needed.   

History 

Like many others, have been at this audio hobby since I was about 13 when I was consciously aware of the gear versus the actual music relationship. I am now 55 and currently with two adjacent music rooms setup with different gear. Both rooms can do full orchestra symphonies with large dynamic swings. Getting Room B with the Quad 57's to do this was a challenge; but I was able to get it to work with the right amps and powered subs. The Quads require a very different room acoustic setup over the Matrix 800's in Room A.  

I am a pure amateur, audiophile, music lover, past trombone player, and have never been part of the Audio Business as a manufacturer, dealer, distributor, or have any special interest relationships with any of these people. I consider myself a full time music lover, and part time audiophile; although I have friends that could argue this point. I have tried to upload pics and information here, that give a flavor of some of my audio journeys, and associated bouts of Audiophilia Nervosa.  :^)

"Audio Heaven, is for Music Lovers - Audiophiles are never happy.
With that, in the real, authentic, Heaven;  there is room, even for Audiophiles"  
8^0


Living in the country

Having moved away from the city core in the 90's, I have found that audiophiles away from the cities, are in general, scare to find and or keep to themselves. Many of my audio friends are now remote, due to the distance between us; so only virtual communications are possible most of the time. 

The negative aspects of Isolation aside;  one good aspect of living in the country is the clean power and lack of noise and vibrations caused by traffic, trucks, etc...Once experienced and its effect on your listening, you become very aware of the multitude of audiophile products available as band aids, to cover, veil, but never eliminate these artifacts in densely populated areas. 

Thanks for reading and please say Hi.  

Happy Listening  


Read more...

Room Details

Dimensions: 24’ × 20’  Large
Ceiling: 8’


Components Toggle details

    • My Music Library Records, Tape, Cd's, Files.
    I was born in the 60's so I grew up with Classic Rock, Beatles, etc... But I love all music, new music and Opera hits home with me. I played trombone in Jr and High school so the Bass Clef has a bias with me.  Listen more now to the ladies crooning at me, Classical and Jazz with occasional Classical Rock; I think a well recorded full Orchestra Symphony with huge Dynamic swings has the most magic for me.
    • ***** MAIN ROOM aka Panic Room, Dad's Hole, ....*****
    I have had Room A since 1994. It has 3 dedicated lines 20, 20 , 15. This room is personal use. Room B is more for entertaining and spending time with friends. 

    Room A is much better insulated and isolated from my wife. As much as I would like to move the Matrix 800's to the larger Room B space to try them, it would probably just get me that much more trouble.  

    Room A and B are both located on a concrete poured floor. A has a an underpad and flat carpet on top. Spikes from gear stands and speakers are able to penetrate to the concrete with no problem ensuring a solid mechanical connection. The speakers are located 6 feet from the front wall with the room being 24 ft in length. Putting in the 800's over the 801's meant that some of the room treatments were able to be removed due to the 800's double woofers high and low.  This is also one of the reasons I call them very room friendly.
    • RTR - Studer Tape Deck - For Listening & Vinyl Tuning
    RTR - Studer - used to play 15 IPS Tapes. 
     
    1/4 inch 2 track machine. The three pictures attached. Top Left - known as two turntables. my machine being worked on Middle pic - 807 Top Right Pic. A picture of Roger Ginsley with a 48 track machine he is about to split into two 24 tracks. My Studer 807 is calibrated by him. He is also the one that makes the interconnects I use with it.
    • JC Verdier La Platine Vintage Granito Original Design
    2012 

    http://www.jcverdier.com/ADSL/platineVintage.html 

    Just a delight to use. With its presentation, sends the message home that it is all amount the music. Effortless, seamless, but experience is needed is setting up the thread. A real Goldilocks scenario of the thread being too loose, too tight or just right.  Different thread tensions alternate how the motor and platter work together and change the speed. The objective is to get the correct speed with as little effect from the motor. ....  
     
    Original design. Granito Model My version uses a motor only equipped for thread Granito base and solid aluminum billet armpod. The later newer motors are equipped now for belts too - but no one runs them this way that I know of. This decision was made imo to generate more sales as it is easier to setup. But imo the belt grip would play havoc with the motor / magnets marriage which was designed for thread. I would think that belt stretch and its physical changes with temp and humidity changes would also cause problems, and interfere with the natural braking action of the magnets. This is my opinion as mine is thread only. There is a greater learning curve involved with thread. 

    This is the only turntable I am aware of whose platter design includes both acceleration (inertia) and braking (natural forces from same pole magnets) to deal with the records behavior - going from soft to heavily modulated grooves. The motor design, like a marriage with the platter. Think of the childhood merry go rounds that once up to speed - even a little girl could keep them going. To understand how the motor and platter are like a marriage, one need only turn the motor off and the platter spins for 30 seconds with the thread attached. However cut the thread while the platter is turning, and the platter stops much quicker as the two magnets demonstrate their braking capability. Impressive to me is just the plain simplicity of design using physics to get the job done with a piece of string and magnets. I found it important in setup to have the thread positioned in a way that is the least intrusive on the platter; so as to allow the platter to not only do its job as designed; but to also provide the needed jolts as required from the motor to maintain speed stability. 

     In my opinion - you will know when you have set it up properly because you are able to turn the motor off and on and also deflect the thread with your finger - as the records plays - and not affect the music delivery to your ears. I base this when compared directly to 15 IPS Master Tape dubs. In testing for accuracy I run both simultaneously with one lagging 10 seconds behind the other and switch between the two - compensating for gain as tape is a high level signal. When the thread is setup in this fashion there is minimal stress put on it. The current silk thread I am using has recently passed the one year mark. Overall Big Sound from a small piece of thread. 

    Some facts Magnetic bearing design. Brass colored rings are big shielded permanent magnets; same magnet poles repelling each other. The result is "levitation" the space you see between them. No thrust bearing involved. A central spindle bathed in a special oil keeps them aligned. For me personally I did not know what TT bearing noise sounded like until I heard music on a TT without a physical bearing. The plinth is made of Granito. Granito is not real granite but a non-resonant material that looks and feels like granite. A limited edition model.

     "Granito is a material composed by little pieces of marble of very different origin agglomerated inside a mold with cement. Machined and polished. The resonance of the plinth with its suspension is about 5Hz and it is well absorbed by the air cavities." 

    Mr. JC Verdier Note: Newer Platines are provided with a setup bearing. The manual is very clear on the setup bearing. It is just that - a setup tool only. COUNTERFEIT PLATINES Unfortunately there are non-authentic tables out there worldwide from 20 different counterfeiting makers. These tables are out there with people using them. If anyone is unaware of this, see the Platine Information on the JC Verdier website for more info.

    http://www.jcverdier.com/ADSL/platineV.html]Platine 

    The only advice I can give is when buying a Verdier Platine you should be careful to ensure it is a real Platine, especially if buying privately. If you already have one and have doubts, check with an authorized dealer or J.C. Verdier company in France to ensure it is authentic.  
    • Custom Eminent Technology Model 2.5 for MC Carts
    This is a custom build ET 2.5 Tonearm from Bruce Thigpen - A 19 PSI design.I am using the new Long I Beam. Weights are reduced by half and therefore the vertical inertia is higher - a goal of the design. The Aluminum Gooseneck was sourced from NZ. It was through Richard Krebs also an ET2 owner.  I am using Single Shot WBT wiring, Aluminum mount plate. Magnesium armtube. Double Leaf Spring and damping trough. If you are an ET2 owner you know what I am talking about :^).... Advantages of the ET2 airbearing linear tracker tonearm - no VTF changes with VTA adjustment, no offset setup, antiskating and immunity to acoustic feedback, as it rides on film of air. 

    https://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1325551242&&&/Eminent-Technology-ET-2-Tonearm-Owners

    One shot wire. Run at 19 PSI. Damping trough with 1 cc of Oil. Lead weights at the very end of the I Beam.

    VTA on the fly while the record plays and it doesn't change any parameters (VTF) like all other tonearms do. This is due to a patented VTA on the fly system. Have you ever noticed how with same thickness records....some can sound brighter, some bloated and some just right? When they press the records the different plants can have different standards. Records are then cut with varying angles.. even same thickness ones.

    See ET2 Bass Management Below
    • Tonearm Wiring Loom - One shot WBT NextGen
    2011 One shot wiring loom for the ET 2.5. WBT 0102 CU connectors. The design of the ET2 (2.5) allows for this wiring to be changed out in about 10 minutes. Silver and copper can be experimented with.
    • The PUMP ET2
    Life Support for the ET2's.
    Timeter 3000 Medical Industrial Pump. The most important part of the ET2 arms setup. Industrial commercial grade medical pump. Its actually a patient respirator.

    These have an hours counter and come up for sale cheaply on ebay. If you have space in your basement somewhere they are turnkey once set up.

    I have tried large aquarium pumps, smaller medical pumps, compressors.

    This Timeter Medical 50 psi pump has been customized to allow me to regulate air pressure coming out and send 19 psi to the ET2 tonearms. Another regulator with gauge at the arm allows me to accurately adjust for the PSI coming into the arm. Located in another room -cannot be heard in sound room when running.


    The smoothness of air delivery is excellent. No resonance. The pump dumps/expels moisture like a car's AC. Have never seen a drop in the moisture collector; other than one incident when the pump outlet clogged with minerals from the moisture. I now soak the pump outlet in CLR for 2 hours every two months.

    • ET2 In Room Air Regulator & Filter
    2nd Regulator and Filter on wall near the ET arm. Confirms and controls the 19 psi and also filters out moisture in line. Have never seen any moisture in this filter. This device lets me change the pressure going to the arm by just turning the top mounted knob. This regulator is mobile. It can be placed in my lap while the music is playing and pressure adjusted to hear how it affects the music delivery.
    • Audio Research DAC8
    From a DAC only function perspective identical to the ARC REF DAC except the output stage is tubed on the REF. Interesting read.  :^)

     http://www.audioresearch.com/ContentsFiles/DAC8_white_paper.pdf

     
    • Audio Research SP11 - MKII Pre Amp Modded
    Owned many many years. Modded power supply box. Variable Gain for dealing with hot, and compressed source material - Digital and Analog. On the fly cartridge impedance loading. Used in ARC's hotrod mode. Direct output and bypass switch engaged. Amperex Bugle Boys.
    • Matrix 800
    Unique one time all assault effort from B&W at a time when 2 channel was the focus. Smooth, musical yet still detailed. Room Friendly if you can believe it. Imagine 4 subs two high and two low pointed at you for 2 channel music. Each driver 2 woofer, mids, tweeter have their own crossover easily accessible from the back. 
    They were a  2 1/2 year study from Bowers & Wilkins under John Bowers (RIP). I have looked for a long time for a pair. The only time they become available are through owners going to a smaller condo (retiring or divorce).

    All B&W 800 models that followed the Matrix series are the same only in model designation - 800. They are not a replacement or upgrade. They are a different build, design, objectives, sound. Post Matrix 800's are a smaller speaker system (require a sub for full range); they do have better WAF (more easily placed into a shared room with the wife)

    800 matrix can be played at low and high levels with the right amp.
    93db 2.83 volts/1m, Mine are Quad wired. They can be run on four separate amps if one desires as each driver has its own crossover. 

    Top and bottom woofers each excite a different set of waves. These waves cancel each other out. Thats the theory. My listening supports this. Smooth tight bass. It is quite something to experience since their size make you think they will over take the room. Also IMO each woofer works only half as much with four versus two for the desired SPL.  All of this results in a very flexible listening position. All drivers are physically isolated with separate crossovers and Van Den Hul silver wiring from the factory. I run them with both tubes and Solid State. Krell and  the modded Music Reference RM9.  

    Krell Amplifier Story
    My research found me talking with Dan D'Agostino who used matrix 800's as his reference speakers when he designed this era of Krell amps.
    Specifically the FPB series like my FPB600. On a dedicated 20 amp circuit with upgraded 20 amp power cord using Furutech Gold IEC.

    600 wpc - 8 ohms,
    1200 wpc 4 ohms,
    2400 wpc 2 ohms.

    The speakers are a 4 ohms design due to the double woofers.
    New spiders in all the four woofers.
    • KRELL FPB600 & KRELL Bass Alignment Filters
    Krell / 800 Matrix Interface. KRELL FPB600 KRELL 800 Matrix BAF Furutech IEC. 

     20 amp power cord. 
     20 amp wall service. 
     http://hansvt.home.xs4all.nl/pdf/brochures/baf.pdf
    • ROGER MODJESKI Music Reference RM9 MODDED
    I have two of his amps. RM10 used with QUAD 57's

    RM9 Push Pull Tube Amp.
    Used to power Acoustat, 801, 800 speakers.
    WBT 0700 Connectors.
    KT88 output tubes.
    Hardwired for 4 ohm tap. Total Overhaul done April 2015
    • MATRIX 800 INSTALL
    Installation
    • 800 Series Bass Alignment Filter / Equalizer.

    The graph shows the 801 matrix frequency response with and without the filter.

    All 800 series B&W matrix speakers are an active design and are intended to be used with an equalizer by the designer (John Bowers) to achieve the best frequency response.
    This attached graph was sent to me by B&W Europe years ago 

    It is the frequency plot for the 801 matrix "without" using the supplied Bass Alignment Filter. (not sure if it is 801 s2 or s3)
    B&W England are the ones that drew the two dotted lines on the graph. 

    The 801 matrix speakers were designed to be used with the BAF. The speakers with BAF devices were shipped to original owners. But these devices became lost as speakers changed hands. They pop up on their own on ebay.  

    The two interesting parts.  

    Part 1 

    Not only does adding the BAF filter as designed give you a smoother response and allow the speaker to hit 20 hz.  The BAF makes the 801 matrix speaker much more efficient. The ohm ratings can be seen on the right 8 - 6 - 4 - 2 ohms. The 801 matrix s2 and s3 are a very easy 6 ohm steady load with the active equalization provided by the BAF. This opens up amp choices.    

    Part 2 

    Audiophile opinions on the BAF device are kind of split. Not sure if its an even 50% like it, 50% don't like it, but you have the two camps. Why the difference? The room; its acoustic properties, and how the 801 (aka relationship destroyer) deals with it. There is a reason B&W no longer make the 801.  You need a dedicated room. Its makes no business sense. 

    801 matrix owners today (there are many out there and some reading here), that could NOT make the BAF work with the speaker; or who never used it, or even heard of the BAF before;  are taxing their amps way more to make bass with the 801.  
    • ************ SECOND ROOM ***********************
    A backwards seven with the main section 20 -23. This room is the "top of the Seven". It is separated from the bottom portion of the Number 7 shape (12 x 24) by a heavy curtain. It is also adjacent to my other room of which the door is left open. The back of the room has the stairs that go upstairs. One of the pictures has me standing on the stairs. All this makes for a much bigger room as far as sound volume and space is concerned. An in progress dedicated listening space that accommodates different speaker types.
    • ******************SPEAKERS ***********************************
    03/31/2011 Dynamic, ESL, Planar IMO - We listen to our rooms. The speakers in the rooms are like boats. They both represent freedom to me. A 12 foot aluminum boat is perfect for a small lake and your favourite person. But out on the ocean or a big body of water Â… The water/boat analogy in this case is like your room and speakers. Water waves versus sound waves. There is no perfect boat and no perfect speaker. This is because all our rooms are different and the room is the big rock in this audiophile game. Speakers represent the last piece in the audio chain. Their sound represents everything in your audio chain especially the room, before it reaches your ears. Every piece will have an effect on what is heard. This IMO is why it is so important to have a good source. The last few years my speakers have remained intact and I have concentrated on improving the source components. Each time I improved the source my main speakers improved as well. This tells me they are not a bottleneck and I have not yet reached their limits.
    • Dynaudio Acoustics BM12s - Two of these in my Quad Room B .
    Two of these in Room B -  18hz - 60 hz. 
    4th order Linkwitz- Riley crossovers have a really steep slope past 60 hz.
    On paper this made them look like a really good match for the Quad 57's; but how does such a small box make 18 hz.  They have class a/b amps are 4 ohms. 
    I brought them home and demoed them. Very Punchy, Clean and they go really low. A great match with the raised Wayne Picquet Quad 57's. They are placed under the speakers - see pic in my virtual system. 
    • Quad 57 Wayne Picquet rebuild with Music Reference RM10 AMP
    Quad ESL-57 - Wayne Picquet Panels Partnered with the amp that was designed for them - Music Reference RM10 by Roger Modjeski.

    With certain music magic for me.

    8/20/2012 These Quad 57 speakers were designed and put out before I was born. The parts inside which I have replaced like the EHT modules were stamped 1971. Fourteen years after they originally came out. The panels themselves are only a few years old. They were rebuilt by Wayne Piquet in Florida.
    The normal music presentation for stock Quad 57Â’s is as if listening to music from the first row of a balcony. If using stock feet a 2 or 4 x 4 piece of wood or brick under the rear leg angling the speaker downwards toward you actually raises this image. This may be a more realistic presentation in your room.

    Check out my review. http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/frr.pl?rspkr&1309018315&&&/Quad-57-
    • 801 Active Monitors - Currently Stored
    Currently Stored - "Winnie the Pooh" of speakers. Relationship Destroyer. Owned since 1994. Serious Sound Pressure Speaker can re-create an event in your room when positioned and driven properly. Mothers milk bass. During my time with them have used Solid State and Tube amps (Push Pull and OTL's).  In comparison to the DM70 Electrostatic, If the 801 and DM70 were cowboys. The 801s are wearing black hats and the DM70 white ones.  

    801 Matrix S2 and S3 - Designed by John Bowers to be Active Monitors with use of the BAF and become a sixth-order Butterworth alignment. Without the high pass filter they are a vented fourth-order design, specifically in a Bessel alignment. "Fourth-order" is an engineering term that refers to all vented and passive-radiator speakers; sealed boxes are "second order."  

    They are not full range to 20 hz without the BAF. 

    http://kenrockwell.com/audio/b-w/800-series-bass-alignment-filter.htm 

    ***************************************************************************** 

    From Stereophile (re: S2) "Higher in frequency, the response trend (averaged across a 30 degrees lateral window on the tweeter axis) is basically flat, but with a slight excess of energy in the presence region and a corresponding lack of energy in the top octave. All things being equal, this will make the speaker both a little too revealing of recorded detail and somewhat fussy when it comes to the quality of source and amplification components, just as LL noted in his auditioning comments." 

    *******************************************************************************

    801 S2 versus S3. 
    Some of the changes. S3 used a different crossover than s2 - less component count. Better isolated mid and hf boards. Bass inductors with an iron dust core . Rotating midrange – tweeter head assembly was permanently connected. (from 3 to 4 pin delivering separate ground signals to midrange and tweeter) Magnetic fluid cooling of the tweeter (like the 800 matrix) - the reason the apoc protection eliminated (circuits needed for this were also removed) 


    ******************************************************************************* 

     In nearfield very revealing of room setup, system components - SS and Tube, cabling, TT drive systems, poorly recorded music. They reveal all the flaws of the recording. 

    Depending on your audio hobby objectives this can be a good thing or a bad thing...

    See picture of the Bass Alignment Filter. 
    • B&W Electrostatic DM70 John Bowers / JansZen Hybrid
    B&W DM70 Electrostatic Continental Hybrid Speaker Clockwork Orange Movie The late John Bowers (RIP) favorite speakers. JansZen ESL - 500hz and up. B&W Woofer - 500hz and down. Require a large room - elevated to ear level and a good distance from the front wall. Very refined midrange - muscular bass. Non-directional with a large sweetspot.

    n]Designed in 1970. No cost or time constraints during the development. From what I can make out they were discontinued due to costs involved.
    Version One - Power handling 25 watts at all frequencies.
    Version Two - The later DM70 Improved, which looked identical, is suitable for amplifiers of 25-100w, but seems otherwise identical.

    500hz crossover - ESL panel can not be overdriven and is nondirectional.

    ESL Panel was provided by JansZen.
    Sensitivity is 17 watts into nominal impedance required to produce a sound level of 95 dB. at one metre at 400 Hz
    Double fuse protection C and CA versions.


    Restored and refurbished. Silver wiring inside

    http://loudspeaker-repair-service.reromanus.net/B+W-Manual_1970.pdf

    http://reromanus.net/loudspeaker-repair-service/refurbish_DM70.htm

    http://www.mats-enterprise.co.uk/DM70page/index.htm
    • Modded Acoustat Model 3 - Used In Shared Space Upstairs
    Finally hooked up the Model 3's to the OTL's in a temporary fashion.


    These are in our living area shared space
    Custom modded Model 3;s.
    They have rebuilt interfaces.
    Unique granite bases with integrated spikes that weigh 80 lbs.
    Burl Oak Veneer facing and the inside is filled with small sand bags.
    • Technics SP10 MKII with 2nd ET2 High Pressure Manifold
    March 11, 2013 Update


    Next version ? will replace the current black base plinth with a more aesthetic one.

    Pet Project - Has taught me a lot about resonances and vibrations.
    SP10MKII Version Five
    Solid Stainless Steel Legs have threads at both ends and are bolted into the sp10 top plate as well as the solid plinth/platform. The armpod is bolted into the plinth. The plinth is then isolated by the AT-616 Pneumatic footers.
    19 lb Solid Brass Pod
    1 inch Diameter Solid Stainless Steel.

    Previously I had the SP10 MKII in a heavy 7 layer plinth. Birch ply + one mdf layer. This SP10MKII came from a private studio.



    This is the second ET2 I own and it is a high pressure manifold

    Detailed tips and observations here.



    http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1325551242&&&/Eminent-Technology-ET-2-Tonearm-Owners
    • Jean Nantais 100 LB Two Tonearm Custom Lenco
    Jean Nantais Custom turntable.
    Includes:
    100 Pounds - Veneered - Two Tonearm Plinth
    Lenco L75 motor and top plate rebuilt to his standards.
    Reference model spindle, bearing thrust plate.
    Bonded Metacrylate mat
    Bearpaw footers.
    IEC outlet.
    • ************ SOME NOTABLE MEMORIES **************************
    For me some notable equipment. Currently stored or sold-indicated as such.
    • McAlister OTL 195
    OTL195 There is a review contained in my system thread. In comparisons to good Solid State Class A and Push Pull amps they were like driving a 911 but you are limited to 1st gear when pushed. Very fast and punchy. But lack the bass that push pull deliver on. Get the bass right and everything else comes into place. These amps are designed around the needs of Acoustats. My Acoustats are in the shared room upstairs. I no longer own the OTL's.
    • Fidelity Research FR64s
    Gimbal Pivot Arm. I found excellent build quality and a nicely implemented antiskate system. I also found a low frequency resonance that accentuated the bass. A warmer sounding tonearm. It was in my second room with the second ET2 not the ET 2.5. Whenever I started a session with the FR64s it was always nice. But curiosity would always prevail and I would switch over to the ET2. It would always remain there. This happened more times than I can remember. I am not a tonearm collector so it was sold to raise funds for another project. I am in agreement with what Cartridge designer Johnathan Carr had to say about it. http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1243274438&openusid&zzJcarr&4&5#Jcarr
    • Modded VPI's
    Thread driven TNT and a JMW 12 using rollerblock jrs. SOLD
    • Acoustat Spectra 33
    Acoustat Spectra 33
    • Eminent Technology LFT 8a
    Set up in midfield - soundstage at both sides of the room. So the speaker shown is the left or the right one depending on side of room you are on. Excellent Magnetic Planar Hybrid Woofer Speaker. Very natural sounding but difficult to drive.
    • ****************AUDIOPHILE FUN + ET 2 TONEARM MODS ************** ****
    From here down are some inserts from past audiophile fun. 
    Also contained here is important information on the ET2, 2.5  tonearms as well as some of the mods I have done to them. If any questions on any of them let me know. No Holds Barred tonearm. User needs to be mechanically inclined and be willing to read ET2 manual instructions for proper setup of this tonearm. If bought on the used market a friend that is familiar with the tonearm for proper inspection of condition is important. 
     Audiogon ET2 thread 

     http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1325551242&&&/Eminent-Technology-ET-2-Tonearm-
    • COMPARING TURNTABLES (Jan 2010)
    Goldilocks and the Three Turntables . See Sept 20, 2019 post comment below on my virtual system for findings / details. 

    Belt Drive (converted to thread) VPI TNT Idler - Jean Nantais Custom 100 Lb Direct Drive - SP10MKII When compared in the same room(nearfield), with same gear, tonearm and cartridge, same time, differences are revealed. Out into rooms on their own, this is not as noticeable as our ears deal with different room acoustics. ymmv
    • OTL VERSUS PUSH PULL Tube Amps
    In room comparison.
    • Thread Drive Comparisons
    2010 testing out different threads. Fabricland became a favorite place of mine.
    • ET 2 Tonearm Proper Bass Management - ATB
    According to Bruce
    My ears agree
    • ET 2.0 Manifold Before and After Cleaning
    Pictures courtesty of a friend.
    • ET2 VTA Block Destroyed
    Thigpen Genius showing VTA Block rack of teeth and worm gear. This one was abused. If you are buying a used one ensure the rack of teeth seen in the pic are uniform with no wear and baldspots. This is an indicator that the VTA block was misused and rigidly tightened stripping the teeth. The bolt was tightened to a point that shattered the CF.
    • ET 2.0 2.5 Tonearm VTA Block Torquing Procedure
    VTA Block - Ensure each of the four bolts is torqued equally or the patented VTA system will be off. This procedures takes just minutes and should be done off table or you will throw your alignment off. Once bolts are torqued the manifold housing can be mounted to the pillar post and the rest of the setup completed.
    • ET 2.0, 2.5 Tonearm Magnesium versus Aluminum Armtubes
    Mag - MC Cartridges Aluminum - MM Catridges The middle ground is the Carbon Fibre arm tube. MM and MC.
    • ET 2.0, 2.5 Custom Aluminum Joint - aka GOOSENECK
    Black one is the stock one. Sourced from Richard Krebs
    • ET Tonearm Counterweight Bolt Mod
    Get a longer counterweight bolt especially if you like to use heavier cartridges. The stock ET2 bolt is on the right. The longer bolt weighs a bit more, holds more lead weights and allows you to use less lead further out on the I Beam. This provides for the highest vertical mass which is really important with the ET2 as it has medium to high horizontal mass. a 4 - 1 horizontal to vertical ratio. In my system higher vertical mass means cleaner, less resonant, overall better bass.
    The brass rings are meant for balancing only. I prefer to use Blue Tack for this purpose.
    • Et2 Leaf Spring Mods Single, Double, Triple
    General Cartridge Guideline 
     Single Leaf Spring - High compliance 
     Double - Medium Compliance 
     Triple - Low compliance
    • ET2 Pedestal Custom 3
    Solid Brass Arm Pod
    • Koaltar Tweak
    my pal 6 months, 79 lbs.
    • Kitty Tweak Bengal
    a real sweetheart
    • RCA Victor Dog
    I introduce Lucky. He is a mixed breed Jack Russell/Chihuahua mix breed. He will be acting as the Victor RCA dog, 

    The original Victor RCA dog.  
    He was named Nipper and was born in 1884 in Bristol, England, and died in September 1895. He was a mixed-breed dog and probably part Jack Russell Terrier, although some sources suggest that he was a Smooth Fox Terrier, or "part Bull Terrier". He was named Nipper because he would bite the backs of visitors' legs.

Comments 673

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Great pics of fantastic gear and music library!

bdp24

Man, that is one serious compressor!

bdp24

Oh, I forgot to mention.....that 1 ohm impedance of the Quad 57 at very high frequencies is more of a problem in the load it presents to the amp, rather than in affecting frequency response, I believe. The impedance, plus it's phase angle (this is approaching the limits of my knowledge, but I won't let that stop me ;-), drives some amplifier circuits into instability, causing them to "ring". Not any Music Reference amps, though.

bdp24

Chris, I've heard the ET 8a's, at Brooks Berdan's shop. The change in the b version was to the tweeter and it's cross-over only, which is at the unusually high frequency of 10kHz! The x/o is 1st order (6dB/octave), so there is a lot of overlap between the tweeter strip and the main panel (275Hz-10kHz). One of the great things about the LFT is it's main panel reproducing such a large portion of the sound of music, without a x/o in the 275Hz-10kHz range. Brooks had been an ET dealer for years (selling a lot of the arm, and installing it on Oracle and VPI tables), and considered the ET LFT version (dual-sided magnet structure/push-pull operation, lower moving-mass Mylar drivers, etc.) of the magnetic-planar design superior to Magnepan's. I was an ESL-only kind of guy for years (Brooks admired them too, selling the current Quads), only recently adding the ET's to my system. At only $2500/pr, an excellent value!

bdp24

I have a pair of grills for the 57's made by Crosby, the guy known for his Quad 63 mod. It just has a more open "weave" than stock, and I play my 57's with the back grill and burlap & felt removed. My stacked frames have MDF grill frames with cloth stretched across them, covering the naked 57 panels. VERY dangerous voltages inside the 57's!

I at one time also owned a pair of Braun 57's! Peter Walker licensed Braun to make their own version of the 57 for the German market, with the Quad guts in a Braun designed frame. The frame was light gray painted aluminum about 6" deep, that wrapped around the panels, rounded at the four corners like Braun's bookshelf speakers, with integral tubular stands that raised them off the floor. The panels of my pair were shot, and I didn't want to restore another pair, so I sold them to Brooks Berdan for his Hi-Fi museum. I haven't seen them since he died.

bdp24

I have a pair of grills for the 57's made by Crosby, the guy known for his Quad 63 mod. It just has a more open "weave" than stock, and I play my 57's with the back grill and burlap & felt removed. My stacked frames have MDF grill frames with cloth stretched across them, covering the naked 57 panels. VERY dangerous voltages inside the 57's!

I at one time also owned a pair of Braun 57's! Peter Walker licensed Braun to make their own version of the 57 for the German market, with the Quad guts in a Braun designed frame. The frame was light gray painted aluminum about 6" deep, that wrapped around the panels, rounded at the four corners like Braun's bookshelf speakers, with integral tubular stands that raised them off the floor. The panels of my pair were shot, and I didn't want to restore another pair, so I sold them to Brooks Berdan for his Hi-Fi museum. I haven't seen them since he died.

bdp24

Chris, Roger is very serious about making his amps load tolerant. He does not approve of the high output impedance of many (most?) tube amps, as they interact with the speaker's often falling impedance at high frequencies (the Quad 57's impedance falls to around one ohm up there!), the pairing of which results in a rolled off high end. I didn't ask Roger, but I'll bet he worked on the RM-10 until it could provide a flat frequency response when driving the Quad. Solid State amps have very low output impedances of course, but for whatever reason aren't usually a good match with the old Quads, the Bedini 25/25 and small Class-A Levinson's being notable exceptions.

There is a new add-on tweeter that may be great with the Quad---the Townshend Audio Maximum Supertweeter. It's gotten great reviews in Britain.

bdp24

Chris, my bdp24 name comes from my favorite drumset finish and bass drum size, Black Diamond Pearl and 24". I started using it when selling vintage drums (1920's-early 70's) on ebay in the late 90's (964 feedbacks, 100% positive!), and have used it ever since.

I had a woodworker friend of mine (Pete Curry, currently playing bass in the instrumental band Los Straitjackets---we played together in The Hillbilly Soul Surfers in the 90's) make me a pair of stands for stacking Quads, three glued-together layers of 3/4" MDF (2-1/4" thick!) on either side of each pair of panels. I looked at all the different stacking ideas and stands, and came up with my own version. I put the bottom pair raised up so the middle of the panel was 36" off the floor, with the upper panel right above the bottom, almost touching. That way a seated listener would not be looking "down" on the performance (I don't like the balcony perspective either), and a standing listener would hear the upper pair pretty much as the seated listener heard the bottom pair. I made the stands almost 8 feet tall (they are VERY heavy), putting spikes on top (to anchor the stands to the ceiling!) as well as on the bottom. I don't stack anymore, preferring a single on the old Arcici stand.

Almost all 57's need to be reconditioned/repaired, including mine. I bought three pair locally, and took them all to John Koval in Orange, California. John made a name for himself in the 80's when he designed a mod for the 57, which was pretty popular amongst non-purist Quad owners. Many found the very top of the speaker lacking (including Mark Levinson, who added a Decca tweeter to the stacked panels in his HDQ loudspeaker), so John did some measuring (he was an old-school EE type). He attributed the falling response to the narrow strip in the middle of the tweeter panel. Everyone thinks the 57 is a two-way design, but it's not, it's a three way. The highest frequencies emanate from only the very center of the tweeter panel, which because of it's smaller radiating surface doesn't provide as much output as the rest of the tweeter panel does for the lower highs. So John altered the x/o, boosting the output of the ultra-highs, which elevates and extends the high end of the speaker. He didn't tell me that, and he potted his mod in resin so no one could figure it out, but I deduced all of this from what he said to me during our conversations and from what he wrote in his literature.

I don't have the A-S M60's anymore, and the Quads are packed away for now. In fact, everything is box up, as I'm moving up to Portland Oregon in a few weeks. I'm hoping to find a place with a big enough room that I can have all my panels set up (the ET LFT-8b's, Quads, and Tympani IV's), along with the OB and sealed subs. Or at least big enough that I can put the ones not in use against a wall (Ivor be damned!), and alternate between them. I'll have to take pics after I'm up and running, and post them. I've never taken pics of my stuff, as I've been kind of an isolated audiophile (VERY few musicians share my interest in Hi-Fi, listening through and to absolute garbage), connected to the community only through print mags and dealers (Brooks Berdan, primarily) until fairly recently. I am not happy I only learned of Audiogon about a year ago !

The RM-10 is cheap enough (a couple have sold here in the past year for around $1500, iirc) that I may get one for the Quads. It's definitely THE amp for them. I listen to a lot of music with vocals, and the Quads are still unequalled at reproducing them. Baroque is my most listened to Classical, also well served by Quads. But they just don't cut it with AC/DC, at least not for long!

Your good results with nearfield subs has me interested in trying it myself Chris. I'm going to put the OB's by the speakers and the sealed Rythmiks by the listening position. I'll let you know how it works for me!---Eric.

bdp24

Chris, my bdp24 name comes from my favorite drumset finish and bass drum size, Black Diamond Pearl and 24". I started using it when selling vintage drums (1920's-early 70's) on ebay in the late 90's (964 feedbacks, 100% positive!), and have used it ever since.

I had a woodworker friend of mine (Pete Curry, currently playing bass in the instrumental band Los Straitjackets---we played together in The Hillbilly Soul Surfers in the 90's) make me a pair of stands for stacking Quads, three glued-together layers of 3/4" MDF (2-1/4" thick!) on either side of each pair of panels. I looked at all the different stacking ideas and stands, and came up with my own version. I put the bottom pair raised up so the middle of the panel was 36" off the floor, with the upper panel right above the bottom, almost touching. That way a seated listener would not be looking "down" on the performance (I don't like the balcony perspective either), and a standing listener would hear the upper pair pretty much as the seated listener heard the bottom pair. I made the stands almost 8 feet tall (they are VERY heavy), putting spikes on top (to anchor the stands to the ceiling!) as well as on the bottom. I don't stack anymore, preferring a single on the old Arcici stand.

Almost all 57's need to be reconditioned/repaired, including mine. I bought three pair locally, and took them all to John Koval in Orange, California. John made a name for himself in the 80's when he designed a mod for the 57, which was pretty popular amongst non-purist Quad owners. Many found the very top of the speaker lacking (including Mark Levinson, who added a Decca tweeter to the stacked panels in his HDQ loudspeaker), so John did some measuring (he was an old-school EE type). He attributed the falling response to the narrow strip in the middle of the tweeter panel. Everyone thinks the 57 is a two-way design, but it's not, it's a three way. The highest frequencies emanate from only the very center of the tweeter panel, which because of it's smaller radiating surface doesn't provide as much output as the rest of the tweeter panel does for the lower highs. So John altered the x/o, boosting the output of the ultra-highs, which elevates and extends the high end of the speaker. He didn't tell me that, and he potted his mod in resin so no one could figure it out, but I deduced all of this from what he said to me during our conversations and from what he wrote in his literature.

I don't have the A-S M60's anymore, and the Quads are packed away for now. In fact, everything is box up, as I'm moving up to Portland Oregon in a few weeks. I'm hoping to find a place with a big enough room that I can have all my panels set up (the ET LFT-8b's, Quads, and Tympani IV's), along with the OB and sealed subs. Or at least big enough that I can put the ones not in use against a wall (Ivor be damned!), and alternate between them. I'll have to take pics after I'm up and running, and post them. I've never taken pics of my stuff, as I've been kind of an isolated audiophile (VERY few musicians share my interest in Hi-Fi, listening through and to absolute garbage), connected to the community only through print mags and dealers (Brooks Berdan, primarily) until fairly recently. I am not happy I only learned of Audiogon about a year ago !

The RM-10 is cheap enough (a couple have sold here in the past year for around $1500, iirc) that I may get one for the Quads. It's definitely THE amp for them. I listen to a lot of music with vocals, and the Quads are still unequalled at reproducing them. Baroque is my most listened to Classical, also well served by Quads. But they just don't cut it with AC/DC, at least not for long!

Your good results with nearfield subs has me interested in trying it myself Chris. I'm going to put the OB's by the speakers and the sealed Rythmiks by the listening position. I'll let you know how it works for me!---Eric.

bdp24

Chris, my bdp24 name comes from my favorite drumset finish and bass drum size, Black Diamond Pearl and 24". I started using it when selling vintage drums (1920's-early 70's) on ebay in the late 90's (964 feedbacks, 100% positive!), and have used it ever since.

I had a woodworker friend of mine (Pete Curry, currently playing bass in the instrumental band Los Straitjackets---we played together in The Hillbilly Soul Surfers in the 90's) make me a pair of stands for stacking Quads, three glued-together layers of 3/4" MDF (2-1/4" thick!) on either side of each pair of panels. I looked at all the different stacking ideas and stands, and came up with my own version. I put the bottom pair raised up so the middle of the panel was 36" off the floor, with the upper panel right above the bottom, almost touching. That way a seated listener would not be looking "down" on the performance (I don't like the balcony perspective either), and a standing listener would hear the upper pair pretty much as the seated listener heard the bottom pair. I made the stands almost 8 feet tall (they are VERY heavy), putting spikes on top (to anchor the stands to the ceiling!) as well as on the bottom. I don't stack anymore, preferring a single on the old Arcici stand.

Almost all 57's need to be reconditioned/repaired, including mine. I bought three pair locally, and took them all to John Koval in Orange, California. John made a name for himself in the 80's when he designed a mod for the 57, which was pretty popular amongst non-purist Quad owners. Many found the very top of the speaker lacking (including Mark Levinson, who added a Decca tweeter to the stacked panels in his HDQ loudspeaker), so John did some measuring (he was an old-school EE type). He attributed the falling response to the narrow strip in the middle of the tweeter panel. Everyone thinks the 57 is a two-way design, but it's not, it's a three way. The highest frequencies emanate from only the very center of the tweeter panel, which because of it's smaller radiating surface doesn't provide as much output as the rest of the tweeter panel does for the lower highs. So John altered the x/o, boosting the output of the ultra-highs, which elevates and extends the high end of the speaker. He didn't tell me that, and he potted his mod in resin so no one could figure it out, but I deduced all of this from what he said to me during our conversations and from what he wrote in his literature.

I don't have the A-S M60's anymore, and the Quads are packed away for now. In fact, everything is box up, as I'm moving up to Portland Oregon in a few weeks. I'm hoping to find a place with a big enough room that I can have all my panels set up (the ET LFT-8b's, Quads, and Tympani IV's), along with the OB and sealed subs. Or at least big enough that I can put the ones not in use against a wall (Ivor be damned!), and alternate between them. I'll have to take pics after I'm up and running, and post them. I've never taken pics of my stuff, as I've been kind of an isolated audiophile (VERY few musicians share my interest in Hi-Fi, listening through and to absolute garbage), connected to the community only through print mags and dealers (Brooks Berdan, primarily) until fairly recently. I am not happy I only learned of Audiogon about a year ago !

The RM-10 is cheap enough (a couple have sold here in the past year for around $1500, iirc) that I may get one for the Quads. It's definitely THE amp for them. I listen to a lot of music with vocals, and the Quads are still unequalled at reproducing them. Baroque is my most listened to Classical, also well served by Quads. But they just don't cut it with AC/DC, at least not for long!

Your good results with nearfield subs has me interested in trying it myself Chris. I'm going to put the OB's by the speakers and the sealed Rythmiks by the listening position. I'll let you know how it works for me!---Eric.

bdp24

Chris, my bdp24 name comes from my favorite drumset finish and bass drum size, Black Diamond Pearl and 24". I started using it when selling vintage drums (1920's-early 70's) on ebay in the late 90's (964 feedbacks, 100% positive!), and have used it ever since.

I had a woodworker friend of mine (Pete Curry, currently playing bass in the instrumental band Los Straitjackets---we played together in The Hillbilly Soul Surfers in the 90's) make me a pair of stands for stacking Quads, three glued-together layers of 3/4" MDF (2-1/4" thick!) on either side of each pair of panels. I looked at all the different stacking ideas and stands, and came up with my own version. I put the bottom pair raised up so the middle of the panel was 36" off the floor, with the upper panel right above the bottom, almost touching. That way a seated listener would not be looking "down" on the performance (I don't like the balcony perspective either), and a standing listener would hear the upper pair pretty much as the seated listener heard the bottom pair. I made the stands almost 8 feet tall (they are VERY heavy), putting spikes on top (to anchor the stands to the ceiling!) as well as on the bottom. I don't stack anymore, preferring a single on the old Arcici stand.

Almost all 57's need to be reconditioned/repaired, including mine. I bought three pair locally, and took them all to John Koval in Orange, California. John made a name for himself in the 80's when he designed a mod for the 57, which was pretty popular amongst non-purist Quad owners. Many found the very top of the speaker lacking (including Mark Levinson, who added a Decca tweeter to the stacked panels in his HDQ loudspeaker), so John did some measuring (he was an old-school EE type). He attributed the falling response to the narrow strip in the middle of the tweeter panel. Everyone thinks the 57 is a two-way design, but it's not, it's a three way. The highest frequencies emanate from only the very center of the tweeter panel, which because of it's smaller radiating surface doesn't provide as much output as the rest of the tweeter panel does for the lower highs. So John altered the x/o, boosting the output of the ultra-highs, which elevates and extends the high end of the speaker. He didn't tell me that, and he potted his mod in resin so no one could figure it out, but I deduced all of this from what he said to me during our conversations and from what he wrote in his literature.

I don't have the A-S M60's anymore, and the Quads are packed away for now. In fact, everything is box up, as I'm moving up to Portland Oregon in a few weeks. I'm hoping to find a place with a big enough room that I can have all my panels set up (the ET LFT-8b's, Quads, and Tympani IV's), along with the OB and sealed subs. Or at least big enough that I can put the ones not in use against a wall (Ivor be damned!), and alternate between them. I'll have to take pics after I'm up and running, and post them. I've never taken pics of my stuff, as I've been kind of an isolated audiophile (VERY few musicians share my interest in Hi-Fi, listening through and to absolute garbage), connected to the community only through print mags and dealers (Brooks Berdan, primarily) until fairly recently. I am not happy I only learned of Audiogon about a year ago !

The RM-10 is cheap enough (a couple have sold here in the past year for around $1500, iirc) that I may get one for the Quads. It's definitely THE amp for them. I listen to a lot of music with vocals, and the Quads are still unequalled at reproducing them. Baroque is my most listened to Classical, also well served by Quads. But they just don't cut it with AC/DC, at least not for long!

Your good results with nearfield subs has me interested in trying it myself Chris. I'm going to put the OB's by the speakers and the sealed Rythmiks by the listening position. I'll let you know how it works for me!---Eric.

bdp24

Chris, my bdp24 name comes from my favorite drumset finish and bass drum size, Black Diamond Pearl and 24". I started using it when selling vintage drums (1920's-early 70's) on ebay in the late 90's (964 feedbacks, 100% positive!), and have used it ever since.

I had a woodworker friend of mine (Pete Curry, currently playing bass in the instrumental band Los Straitjackets---we played together in The Hillbilly Soul Surfers in the 90's) make me a pair of stands for stacking Quads, three glued-together layers of 3/4" MDF (2-1/4" thick!) on either side of each pair of panels. I looked at all the different stacking ideas and stands, and came up with my own version. I put the bottom pair raised up so the middle of the panel was 36" off the floor, with the upper panel right above the bottom, almost touching. That way a seated listener would not be looking "down" on the performance (I don't like the balcony perspective either), and a standing listener would hear the upper pair pretty much as the seated listener heard the bottom pair. I made the stands almost 8 feet tall (they are VERY heavy), putting spikes on top (to anchor the stands to the ceiling!) as well as on the bottom. I don't stack anymore, preferring a single on the old Arcici stand.

Almost all 57's need to be reconditioned/repaired, including mine. I bought three pair locally, and took them all to John Koval in Orange, California. John made a name for himself in the 80's when he designed a mod for the 57, which was pretty popular amongst non-purist Quad owners. Many found the very top of the speaker lacking (including Mark Levinson, who added a Decca tweeter to the stacked panels in his HDQ loudspeaker), so John did some measuring (he was an old-school EE type). He attributed the falling response to the narrow strip in the middle of the tweeter panel. Everyone thinks the 57 is a two-way design, but it's not, it's a three way. The highest frequencies emanate from only the very center of the tweeter panel, which because of it's smaller radiating surface doesn't provide as much output as the rest of the tweeter panel does for the lower highs. So John altered the x/o, boosting the output of the ultra-highs, which elevates and extends the high end of the speaker. He didn't tell me that, and he potted his mod in resin so no one could figure it out, but I deduced all of this from what he said to me during our conversations and from what he wrote in his literature.

I don't have the A-S M60's anymore, and the Quads are packed away for now. In fact, everything is box up, as I'm moving up to Portland Oregon in a few weeks. I'm hoping to find a place with a big enough room that I can have all my panels set up (the ET LFT-8b's, Quads, and Tympani IV's), along with the OB and sealed subs. Or at least big enough that I can put the ones not in use against a wall (Ivor be damned!), and alternate between them. I'll have to take pics after I'm up and running, and post them. I've never taken pics of my stuff, as I've been kind of an isolated audiophile (VERY few musicians share my interest in Hi-Fi, listening through and to absolute garbage), connected to the community only through print mags and dealers (Brooks Berdan, primarily) until fairly recently. I am not happy I only learned of Audiogon about a year ago !

The RM-10 is cheap enough (a couple have sold here in the past year for around $1500, iirc) that I may get one for the Quads. It's definitely THE amp for them. I listen to a lot of music with vocals, and the Quads are still unequalled at reproducing them. Baroque is my most listened to Classical, also well served by Quads. But they just don't cut it with AC/DC, at least not for long!

Your good results with nearfield subs has me interested in trying it myself Chris. I'm going to put the OB's by the speakers and the sealed Rythmiks by the listening position. I'll let you know how it works for me!---Eric.

bdp24

Chris, my bdp24 name comes from my favorite drumset finish and bass drum size, Black Diamond Pearl and 24". I started using it when selling vintage drums (1920's-early 70's) on ebay in the late 90's (964 feedbacks, 100% positive!), and have used it ever since.

I had a woodworker friend of mine (Pete Curry, currently playing bass in the instrumental band Los Straitjackets---we played together in The Hillbilly Soul Surfers in the 90's) make me a pair of stands for stacking Quads, three glued-together layers of 3/4" MDF (2-1/4" thick!) on either side of each pair of panels. I looked at all the different stacking ideas and stands, and came up with my own version. I put the bottom pair raised up so the middle of the panel was 36" off the floor, with the upper panel right above the bottom, almost touching. That way a seated listener would not be looking "down" on the performance (I don't like the balcony perspective either), and a standing listener would hear the upper pair pretty much as the seated listener heard the bottom pair. I made the stands almost 8 feet tall (they are VERY heavy), putting spikes on top (to anchor the stands to the ceiling!) as well as on the bottom. I don't stack anymore, preferring a single on the old Arcici stand.

Almost all 57's need to be reconditioned/repaired, including mine. I bought three pair locally, and took them all to John Koval in Orange, California. John made a name for himself in the 80's when he designed a mod for the 57, which was pretty popular amongst non-purist Quad owners. Many found the very top of the speaker lacking (including Mark Levinson, who added a Decca tweeter to the stacked panels in his HDQ loudspeaker), so John did some measuring (he was an old-school EE type). He attributed the falling response to the narrow strip in the middle of the tweeter panel. Everyone thinks the 57 is a two-way design, but it's not, it's a three way. The highest frequencies emanate from only the very center of the tweeter panel, which because of it's smaller radiating surface doesn't provide as much output as the rest of the tweeter panel does for the lower highs. So John altered the x/o, boosting the output of the ultra-highs, which elevates and extends the high end of the speaker. He didn't tell me that, and he potted his mod in resin so no one could figure it out, but I deduced all of this from what he said to me during our conversations and from what he wrote in his literature.

I don't have the A-S M60's anymore, and the Quads are packed away for now. In fact, everything is box up, as I'm moving up to Portland Oregon in a few weeks. I'm hoping to find a place with a big enough room that I can have all my panels set up (the ET LFT-8b's, Quads, and Tympani IV's), along with the OB and sealed subs. Or at least big enough that I can put the ones not in use against a wall (Ivor be damned!), and alternate between them. I'll have to take pics after I'm up and running, and post them. I've never taken pics of my stuff, as I've been kind of an isolated audiophile (VERY few musicians share my interest in Hi-Fi, listening through and to absolute garbage), connected to the community only through print mags and dealers (Brooks Berdan, primarily) until fairly recently. I am not happy I only learned of Audiogon about a year ago !

The RM-10 is cheap enough (a couple have sold here in the past year for around $1500, iirc) that I may get one for the Quads. It's definitely THE amp for them. I listen to a lot of music with vocals, and the Quads are still unequalled at reproducing them. Baroque is my most listened to Classical, also well served by Quads. But they just don't cut it with AC/DC, at least not for long!

Your good results with nearfield subs has me interested in trying it myself Chris. I'm going to put the OB's by the speakers and the sealed Rythmiks by the listening position. I'll let you know how it works for me!---Eric.

bdp24

Chris, my bdp24 name comes from my favorite drumset finish and bass drum size, Black Diamond Pearl and 24". I started using it when selling vintage drums (1920's-early 70's) on ebay in the late 90's (964 feedbacks, 100% positive!), and have used it ever since.

I had a woodworker friend of mine (Pete Curry, currently playing bass in the instrumental band Los Straitjackets---we played together in The Hillbilly Soul Surfers in the 90's) make me a pair of stands for stacking Quads, three glued-together layers of 3/4" MDF (2-1/4" thick!) on either side of each pair of panels. I looked at all the different stacking ideas and stands, and came up with my own version. I put the bottom pair raised up so the middle of the panel was 36" off the floor, with the upper panel right above the bottom, almost touching. That way a seated listener would not be looking "down" on the performance (I don't like the balcony perspective either), and a standing listener would hear the upper pair pretty much as the seated listener heard the bottom pair. I made the stands almost 8 feet tall (they are VERY heavy), putting spikes on top (to anchor the stands to the ceiling!) as well as on the bottom. I don't stack anymore, preferring a single on the old Arcici stand.

Almost all 57's need to be reconditioned/repaired, including mine. I bought three pair locally, and took them all to John Koval in Orange, California. John made a name for himself in the 80's when he designed a mod for the 57, which was pretty popular amongst non-purist Quad owners. Many found the very top of the speaker lacking (including Mark Levinson, who added a Decca tweeter to the stacked panels in his HDQ loudspeaker), so John did some measuring (he was an old-school EE type). He attributed the falling response to the narrow strip in the middle of the tweeter panel. Everyone thinks the 57 is a two-way design, but it's not, it's a three way. The highest frequencies emanate from only the very center of the tweeter panel, which because of it's smaller radiating surface doesn't provide as much output as the rest of the tweeter panel does for the lower highs. So John altered the x/o, boosting the output of the ultra-highs, which elevates and extends the high end of the speaker. He didn't tell me that, and he potted his mod in resin so no one could figure it out, but I deduced all of this from what he said to me during our conversations and from what he wrote in his literature.

I don't have the A-S M60's anymore, and the Quads are packed away for now. In fact, everything is box up, as I'm moving up to Portland Oregon in a few weeks. I'm hoping to find a place with a big enough room that I can have all my panels set up (the ET LFT-8b's, Quads, and Tympani IV's), along with the OB and sealed subs. Or at least big enough that I can put the ones not in use against a wall (Ivor be damned!), and alternate between them. I'll have to take pics after I'm up and running, and post them. I've never taken pics of my stuff, as I've been kind of an isolated audiophile (VERY few musicians share my interest in Hi-Fi, listening through and to absolute garbage), connected to the community only through print mags and dealers (Brooks Berdan, primarily) until fairly recently. I am not happy I only learned of Audiogon about a year ago !

The RM-10 is cheap enough (a couple have sold here in the past year for around $1500, iirc) that I may get one for the Quads. It's definitely THE amp for them. I listen to a lot of music with vocals, and the Quads are still unequalled at reproducing them. Baroque is my most listened to Classical, also well served by Quads. But they just don't cut it with AC/DC, at least not for long!

Your good results with nearfield subs has me interested in trying it myself Chris. I'm going to put the OB's by the speakers and the sealed Rythmiks by the listening position. I'll let you know how it works for me!---Eric.

bdp24

Chris, my bdp24 name comes from my favorite drumset finish and bass drum size, Black Diamond Pearl and 24". I started using it when selling vintage drums (1920's-early 70's) on ebay in the late 90's (964 feedbacks, 100% positive!), and have used it ever since.

I had a woodworker friend of mine (Pete Curry, currently playing bass in the instrumental band Los Straitjackets---we played together in The Hillbilly Soul Surfers in the 90's) make me a pair of stands for stacking Quads, three glued-together layers of 3/4" MDF (2-1/4" thick!) on either side of each pair of panels. I looked at all the different stacking ideas and stands, and came up with my own version. I put the bottom pair raised up so the middle of the panel was 36" off the floor, with the upper panel right above the bottom, almost touching. That way a seated listener would not be looking "down" on the performance (I don't like the balcony perspective either), and a standing listener would hear the upper pair pretty much as the seated listener heard the bottom pair. I made the stands almost 8 feet tall (they are VERY heavy), putting spikes on top (to anchor the stands to the ceiling!) as well as on the bottom. I don't stack anymore, preferring a single on the old Arcici stand.

Almost all 57's need to be reconditioned/repaired, including mine. I bought three pair locally, and took them all to John Koval in Orange, California. John made a name for himself in the 80's when he designed a mod for the 57, which was pretty popular amongst non-purist Quad owners. Many found the very top of the speaker lacking (including Mark Levinson, who added a Decca tweeter to the stacked panels in his HDQ loudspeaker), so John did some measuring (he was an old-school EE type). He attributed the falling response to the narrow strip in the middle of the tweeter panel. Everyone thinks the 57 is a two-way design, but it's not, it's a three way. The highest frequencies emanate from only the very center of the tweeter panel, which because of it's smaller radiating surface doesn't provide as much output as the rest of the tweeter panel does for the lower highs. So John altered the x/o, boosting the output of the ultra-highs, which elevates and extends the high end of the speaker. He didn't tell me that, and he potted his mod in resin so no one could figure it out, but I deduced all of this from what he said to me during our conversations and from what he wrote in his literature.

I don't have the A-S M60's anymore, and the Quads are packed away for now. In fact, everything is box up, as I'm moving up to Portland Oregon in a few weeks. I'm hoping to find a place with a big enough room that I can have all my panels set up (the ET LFT-8b's, Quads, and Tympani IV's), along with the OB and sealed subs. Or at least big enough that I can put the ones not in use against a wall (Ivor be damned!), and alternate between them. I'll have to take pics after I'm up and running, and post them. I've never taken pics of my stuff, as I've been kind of an isolated audiophile (VERY few musicians share my interest in Hi-Fi, listening through and to absolute garbage), connected to the community only through print mags and dealers (Brooks Berdan, primarily) until fairly recently. I am not happy I only learned of Audiogon about a year ago !

The RM-10 is cheap enough (a couple have sold here in the past year for around $1500, iirc) that I may get one for the Quads. It's definitely THE amp for them. I listen to a lot of music with vocals, and the Quads are still unequalled at reproducing them. Baroque is my most listened to Classical, also well served by Quads. But they just don't cut it with AC/DC, at least not for long!

Your good results with nearfield subs has me interested in trying it myself Chris. I'm going to put the OB's by the speakers and the sealed Rythmiks by the listening position. I'll let you know how it works for me!---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Let me address your concerns Chris, all well founded.

- Yes, the OB/Dipole sub needs to be away from the wall behind it, as do all Dipoles, including Quads. They can be right up against a side wall though, or on the floor if placed horizontally.

- B & W DM70! Now there's a speaker I haven't thought of in years. In '71 I heard my first ESL's, the Infinity Servo-Static 1. I also heard two speakers with ESL tweeters, the Infinity 2000A and ESS Tran-Static I. Thus began my love affair with ESL's, which continues to this day.

Having heard those speakers, I started planning the purchase of my first perfectionist system. By the time I had the dough, Audio Research and Magnepan had made it to the West Coast. I happened to make my first visit to the new ARC dealer in my area (Audio Arts in Livermore, CA, owned by Walter Davies, now the maker and seller of the excellent Last LP care products) on the day that Bill Johnson was delivering and setting up his complete ARC system, including bi-amped (with D-51 and D-75 amps) Magneplanar Tympani I-U loudspeakers. Over the next few months I went to listen to the Maggies at the shop, wherein Walt had a pair of the DM70's as well. I bought the Tympani's (and the ARC electronics), but remember the B & W's well. To be honest, I can't imagine why you would be using the woofer in that speaker as a sub for Quads! Let me tell ya, you are in for a pleasant surprise when you hear the OB/Dipole sub (or a Rythmik)!

- Danny Richie has found a pair of the OB/Dipole subs to produce about the same output as one of the sealed F12's. So yes, you are giving up 3dB by going OB/Dipole. Then why do people do it? I have both a pair of GR Research OB/Dipole subs and a pair of Rythmik F15HP subs, and though they have much in common, there are also differences. You will find all of the following on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum, but it is buried in a lot of other information. So let me condense it for you:

Danny Richie is a loudspeaker designer specializing in Open Baffle design, selling his designs as kits to the DIY crowd. Guys who make not only their own speakers, but often their own electronics as well. His designs are mostly of high-sensitivity, and his customers are into low-powered SET tube and Class A SS amps to power Danny's speakers, the Pass DIY designs being very popular. Danny is a firm believer in high-quality passive parts, offering x/o upgrades to commercial loudspeakers using them. So Danny is coming from a perfectionist, no compromise, high performance point of view.

He had been a long-time fan of not just OB speakers, but OB subs as well. OB subs are not new, and are favored by some, Danny included, for their non-room loading nature (a result of their Dipole design), and clean unboomy character (no enclosure!). He learned of a subwoofer designer, conveniently also located in Texas, who had a new idea that he had patented, which he had named Direct Servo Feedback. The designer's name was Brian Ding and his company Rythmik Audio, and Danny got in touch with him. Danny's creative mind envisioned that an Open Baffle sub combined with Brian's DSF design could produce a new standard in bass reproduction. The two put their heads together, and we can now enjoy the fruits of their skills and labors.

But here's what you have to realize: Though the OB/Dipole sub uses the Rythmik plate including the Direct Servo Feedback circuit that controls the 12" woofers in the sub, the sub is a Danny Richie design. Enrico is of course not going to recommend the sub to you (or even mention it), or be able to advise you on it's use. He is involved with Rythmik, a completely separate operation with a different target audience and customer bass (largely Home Theater, most definitely not audiophile. Most Rythmik customers power their mass-market speakers with receivers, like Denon). Brian Ding himself is not really that much enamored with the OB sub. Upon hearing it, he admitted to not quite knowing what to make of it, finding it to sound very "lean". Now, the Rythmik subs themselves have been described as sounding lean when compared to "normal" subs, even very famous, expensive, "Class A" rated ones. Compared to them, a Rythmik is superior in degree, but not in kind. The OB/Dipole sub is different in kind, as different from a Rythmik sub as a Rythmik is from all the thick/heavy/boomy subs everyone has heard and found unacceptable for use with panel speakers. The same way that an electrostatic loudspeaker or any other dipole is different from Any and all box speakers.

The GR Research OB/Dipole sub does not sound like a sub. When added to a high-transparency speaker, it does not expose it's presence, but rather blends invisibly. You do not hear it as a separate entity, but only hear the bottom octave of music evaporate when you turn it off! It makes your speaker sound like the bottom octave of missing sound has been restored, not that a sub has been tacked on the bottom of the speaker, trailing along behind the music like a caboose. Now I ask you, is that worth giving up 3dB for?!

- The Rythmik plate amp is loaded with controls that will allow you to add the sub to your Quads without giving up any of their sound quality. If you want to x/o at 80Hz using a 2nd order x/o you can. If you prefer 120Hz with a 4th order, you can do that as well. Or any combination of the two. You can locate the subs anywhere you want, as the plate amp's continuously variable 0-180 degree phase knob simulates physical distance, and can get the speaker and sub in phase at the x/o frequency no matter where each is located.

- There is actually one person making speakers that include the OB/Dipole woofer system, Ric Schultz at Electronic Visionary Systems. He has been making Open Baffle speakers on 2-1/4" thick MDF panels, using the GR Research 12" woofers and Rythmik DSF plate amp for the bass section. The midrange an tweeters he was using (BG Neo) are currently unavailable, but Ric may be willing to make you a pair of subs. He does not, however, make it as a W- or H-frame, but as a flat baffle. So there may be more low-end cancellation and roll-off in his version of the sub. You can check him out on his website.

- Here's my experience with the Music Reference RM-10: Roger Modjeski gave a seminar in the early 90's at Brooks Berdan's shop in Monrovia, CA. In it, Roger discussed a new design he was still working on, which became the RM-10. He mentioned that the Quad was one speaker he had been using in fine-tuning the circuit. After the talk I approached Roger, telling him I was looking for amplification for my stacked Quads. I asked him if he advised me to wait for the RM-10's design to be finalized and put into production, when I could get a pair of them, one for each pair of Quads, or to get one of the already available RM9 amps. He told me that because he was a believer in high-overload margins, he would go with the RM9. I pressed him further, pointing out that one RM-10 would have more power than a pair of Quads would be able to accept without damage to the panels from arcing, that the combined insanely low impedance of the Quads at high frequencies was even lower in a stacked pair, and that lower-powered amps, all else being equal, usually sound better than higher-powered ones. That didn't persuade him.

A couple of years later, Roger gave another seminar at Brooks shop (Brooks loved Rogers stuff, selling it as his "reasonably" priced tube line, selling VTL to his wealthy customers). When Roger saw me, he came over and said my questions had lead him to reconsider his position on the choice, having seen the wisdom in my thoughts on the subject. Yes, he did now recommend a pair of RM-10's. Unfortunately, I had already bought an Atma-Sphere M60!

Well Chris, I hope I haven't overstayed my welcome, and that at least some of this rant will be of use (or at least interest!) to you---Eric.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Oh, I neglected to address your desire to fill in only the bottom of the Quad, without encroaching on the it's sound above that. A well-justified concern Chris, and the inability of almost all subs to do just that is exactly why most Quad lovers choose to just live without deep bass, the loss of too much of the Quad's sound being too high a price to pay to get it.

If you read comments on the Rythmik AVS Forum from some of the non-audiophile/more-home theater customers who have bought Rythmik subs after having owned mass-market ones, they are at first concerned that they don't hear their new Rythmik sub as much as they did their old one. After living with it for awhile, they learn that the sub sound they were used to is the thick/slow/boomy sound that characterizes many subs, the kind of bass that makes most subs unacceptable for use with really good speakers, like Quads.

Even the non-OB/Dipole Rythmik is very transparent and non-obtrusively invisible, producing bass that sounds not separate and detached from the speakers, but merely making the speakers sound as if they themselves have gained an octave (or more---many speakers are already in serious decline at 42Hz, the frequency produced by the E string of the 4-string bass played open/unfretted) of bandwidth at the bottom, providing the bass foundation necessary for some music to sound really "right". I used my Quads un-augmented for years (for awhile in stacked pairs for which I made 2-1/4" thick MDF stands, spiked to the floor AND ceiling!), but can't imagine them now without the GR Research OB/Dipole subs. They're THAT good! The subwoofer (and the bass section of the GR Research Super-V, a Danny Richie loudspeaker incorporating the sub) was voted "Best Bass at the Show" at RMAF for quite a few years running. If one of the major loudspeaker/subwoofer companies licensed the rights to manufacture and market the sub, I have no doubt they would sell a LOT of them. Until then, one has to DIY.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Yeah Chris (saw your name!), Brian Ding of Rythmik designed and builds the plate amp (some of the electronics are sent to him from China, of course), and worked with Danny of GR Research in the design of the two OB woofers (8" & 12"). They also worked together in the development of the shelving circuit (6dB/octave boost below a certain frequency, to counteract the front-to-back cancellation inherent in all dipole speakers and subs) installed in the amp when it is used for driving the OB woofers. But Rythmik (Brian and Enrico) doesn't actively promote the OB/Dipole sub, Danny Richie of GR Research does. Any questions you have about the sub are better asked of him---it is his "baby". And it is his customers who buy, use, and discuss the OB/Dipole sub, not Rythmik customers. It's an unusual relationship and arrangement Brian and Danny have, but has worked out great. Both happen to be located in Texas, which may be one reason they got together.

I don't know how you feel about this idea Chris, but the width of a W- or H-frame is around 16". The OB/Dipole sub can actually be used horizontally (laid on it's side), and a Quad speaker set on top of it, the sub thus becoming a 16" high stand for the speaker. Since there is a null on each side of the frame, there is no sonic penalty for doing so, except for any vibration transferred from the sub frame to the Quad. A set of Townshend Audio Seismic Pods between sub and speaker will take care of that. The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 speaker was used that exact way, Gradient even styling the sub to look like it came from the Quad factory, it's size and shape matched to that of the 63. A simple phase-coherent 6dB/octave crossover (just a capacitor and resistor across the input jacks of the amp powering the Quads) can then be used, as the woofers and ESL panels will be closely aligned.

Richard Vandersteen's sub itself uses a 1st order crossover, and has been very successfully used with Quads and other planars. Brooks Berdan was a big fan of them when he was a Vandersteen dealer (one of the biggest in the country), and I heard them at his shop many times. I could live with a pair, and they would definitely be worth a try, especially if you don't want to have to go to the trouble of building or having built for you the frames for GR subs.

The Gradient OB/Dipole sub for the Quad 63 was reviewed in TAS in the early 90's, I believe it was. You can read the review at regonaudio.com, in which the advantages and benefits of it's use with the 63's is discussed. And there is a lot to read about the GR Research sub on Danny's AudioCircle Forum. Definitely worth looking into, for what I feel turns any good planar speaker into a way over-achieving (for the investment) full-range (ten octave!) loudspeaker. An OB/Dipole sub really is the ultimate solution to the missing bottom octave of response and limited maximum SPL output capabilities of most planar loudspeakers, non more so than the Quad 57.

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Ct, the OB/Dipole sub is a completely different animal than any sealed or ported sub. If you want a plug & play Rythmik sub, you'll need to go with the F15HP (or the smaller E15HP; same amp and woofer, just a slightly smaller cabinet). The OB/Dipole is available only as a kit (a plate amp and two 12" woofers), the W-or H-frame the woofers are installed in needing to be custom built. But you could have the frame(s) built for you locally, from the diagrams on the GR Research site. The GR Research Forum on AudioCircle is where you can find all the discussion of the OB/Dipole sub, not on the Rythmik AVS Forum.

The back-and-forth with Rythmik you've been having has been with Brian's right hand man Enrico. You can see his set-up, including sub locations, in his profile.

Your finding of subs being "slower" than your Quads is of course very common amongst not just Quad owners, but all planar owners, especially those of electrostatics. The seeming slowness, or lack of speed, of subs comes not from their inability to follow the steep front edge of a transient, but in their inability to "stop" when the signal does, referred to as "overshoot". Rythmiks in contrast "stop on a dime" as the old expression goes. Another reason is the relatively high moving mass of a lot of subwoofer cones, the mass storing energy. Mass is often added to woofer cones to lower their resonant frequency, but not without a penalty---the added mass and stored energy decreases the driver's "inter-transient silence", resulting in a less transparent sound. Brian Ding has a patented Direct Servo Feedback design in his plate amps and woofers, and it makes for a very clean, quick, transparent sound from the custom-made 8, 12, and 15 inch drivers.

The OB/Dipole sub I thought would be of particular interest to you Ct. It is an even better match with both your Quad and Eminent Technology loudspeakers than a regular Rythmik. The sub includes the DSF design, but the Dipole design and configuration gives it several advantages over a sealed or ported sub for use with planar speakers. First, it has the same figure-of-8 radiation pattern as planar loudspeakers, with a null at each side, so the sub can be placed side-by-side with the planar (allowing the use of a higher x/o frequency, for instance the 180Hz of the ET LFT-8b). Secondly, the fall-off of output with increasing distance from a speaker is less with planars than non-planars (including subs); with a Dipole sub, the balance between it and any planar loudspeaker remains constant, no matter the listening distance. That is NOT true of a planar loudspeaker with a non-planar sub, the balance between those two varying according to listening distance.

As to locating subs nearfield to reduce possible distortion, consider this: The limiting factor in a hybrid loudspeaker/sub pairing will be the maximum output of your loudspeakers, not the sub. When your Quads have reached their maximum SPL, the subs will still be coasting! The choice of sub location can therefore be determined from other considerations, it's seamless integration with the loudspeakers being the priority, I presume. Since you can't hear the Gr Research/Rythmik OB/Dipole Sub before purchase, I highly recommend reading all about it on the GR AudioCircle Forum. It's VERY special!

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

Did you email GR Research, or Rythmik? Rythmik lists the OB Sub kit in their product listings, but all the discussion of the sub takes place on the GR Research AudioCircle Forum. Danny is much more into them than Brian, and the GR customers are audiophiles while Rythmik's customers are more home theater guys, as are most sub owners, I take it.

The OB Sub can be used up to around 300Hz, so a stereo pair is the norm. By the way, the 180Hz x/o frequency of the ET LFT-8b (from the panels to the sealed 8" woofer) makes the GR OB Sub a perfect replacement for the good-but-not-great woofer in the ET speaker. As with all Dipoles, there is a null at both sides of each sub, where the output from the front-firing and rear-firing woofers meet and cancel. So wherever in the room you place them, they need to face the listening position. Right next to the loudspeakers is a good starting location, but the controls on the Rythmik plate amp (rotary knob for phase 0 to 180 degrees, x/o frequency, damping, volume, etc) makes blending the sub with the speaker possible wherever it is located.

Danny Richie designed an Open baffle loudspeaker he named the Super-V, and it contains the OB/Dipole sub (with a 15" OB co-ax driver for midrange and highs). An owner of a pair of the Super-V just listed it on Audiogon, so you can look at it to get an idea of the look of the sub. The owner posted only one pic, and it's not a very good one. Maybe he'll send you some if you email him.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

There is a DIY sub that is unusually good with Quads (actually, any dipole/planar loudspeaker). It is an offering from the design team of Danny Richie of GR Research and Brian Ding of Rythmik. Their sub is an Open Baffle/Dipole design incorporating a 12" woofer optimized specifically for OB implementation, the driver featuring the Direct Servo Feedback design of Brian Ding. Brian builds the DSF plate amp for the sub, installing in it a shelving circuit to compensate for the acoustic roll-off endemic to Open Baffle woofers.

The Open Baffle sub is an either W- or H-frame housing either two 8ohm woofers or two/three 16ohm ones. The two woofer version faces the drivers in opposing directions and wired in opposing polarity, their resulting output thus being Dipolar/figure-of-8, a distinct advantage with Dipole speakers. Gradient made a similar sub specifically for the Quad 63 in the 80's, if you recall. This new sub features much better woofers (even without their Direct Servo Feedback design) and amp.

The OB Sub DIY kit is available from both GR Research and Rythmik, and the plans for the W- and H-frames can be found on the GR website. Danny has a woodworker who makes an H-frame flat pack for he not able or willing to make his own. The sub has won "Best Bass at Show" at RMAF many years running.

bdp24

It's going to take me quite a while to read through all the responses and discussion of your systems Ct, but I'm sure gonna do it. What an interesting assortment! We obviously hear things similarly to some degree, both having old Quad and ET LFT-8 loudspeakers, and Music Reference power amps.

bdp24