Jump to content

willland

Heritage Members
  • Posts

    11696
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Everything posted by willland

  1. I had an 80lbs plasma TV sitting on my RC-64 for for quite some time with no ill effects. Maybe cut a piece of neoprene to protect between the stand and the wood veneer. A 77" LG OLED is about 80lbs also so you should be just fine. Bill
  2. willland

    RC-64 III

    I had an 80lbs plasma TV sitting on my RC-64 for for quite some time with no ill effects. Maybe cut a piece of neoprene to protect between the stand and the wood veneer. A 77" LG OLED is about 80lbs also so you should be just fine. Bill
  3. @Knightstick, Welcome to the forum. As asked in many other threads. How large is your room? How far is your main listening position? What volumes do you listen to? Before the exacts are known, the RP-280F are very efficient and do not "need" a super high current amp to drive them, so both of your choices appear to be okay. With that said, a quality 80w/ch SS amp should thump those 8" woofers. Bill
  4. If the integrated amp has a fixed LPF at 90Hz via the subwoofer output RCA, then I think you are stuck with that. If your subwoofer has speaker terminals, you could bypass the integrated amps LPF by connecting to subwoofer via speaker level. How about getting an integrated amp with L/R preouts and connect to your subwoofers inputs/s that way. I do that with my Yamaha A-S1000, RSW-10d(when it worked), and RB-75s and with a subwoofer LPF at 60Hz and the results are seamless integration. Tried it with my Heresy IIs and got the same results. Bill
  5. None of the horns can be rotated after the Reference II series. Reference III(RC-35, RC-25, etc.) was the beginning of the fixed horn. RC-7, RC-35, RC-62 in order left to right. Bill
  6. @zelius92, Welcome to the forum. Unless your room is pretty large and you often play your system at high volumes, the BaseX A3's 140w@8/200w@4 should be plenty of grunt to satisfy. Bill
  7. I don't not see a reason not to try. Some folks on this forum use and have used RC-7s as front speakers and are very pleased with the results. One difference is that the RC-7's horns can be rotated one quarter turn so the speakers can be placed vertically. The RC-62s have a fixed horn so they would be best placed horizontally. Bill
  8. The 75s are really a special pair of speakers. Big sound for “bookshelf” speakers. They image very well and produce tight thundering bass into the high 40hz range. With a well integrated subwoofer/s, you get midsize/large floor standing speaker performance that will sure rival the RF-5s. Bill
  9. @ernstan, Welcome to the forum. Is this for a stereo rig or multichannel home theater? What is your budget? Large or small room? Bill
  10. @Mr.Tonos, Welcome to the forum. My suggestion in order. 1. 504C 2. 600C 3. 404C The reason I suggest the RP-600C over the RP404C is that I once had an RC-62 mated to my RF-63s and it did an admirable job keeping up. Not the way it's eventual replacement RC-64 did but still a decent job. I am just not a fan of 4" drivers as midrange/bass combo drivers. Others may have different opinions. Bill
  11. Yes, where is he located? If near me, Central Florida, I "may" sell my Cambridge Audio 640A v2/840C/Klipsch Heresy II combo. Bill
  12. Warranty applies to original owner. Bill
  13. Price lowered again. $175.00 local pick up. Bill
  14. Stereophile test graph RP-600M HSU VTF-15H MK2 test graph(sealed) I am sure you can get them to blend pretty well. Bill
  15. You are very welcome. The RP-600s will only play so deep so just set the LPF on the subwoofer to about 1/2 octave above the RP-600s -3dB lower frequency and you should be good to go. When my Klipsch RSW-10d subwoofer was operating, I set it's LPF to 60Hz to supplement my RB-75s and the integration was seamless, just about perfect. Bill
  16. I sure you will be fine with the 301 unless you blast in a large room. Bill
  17. I think this would be a fine choice. Seems to check all boxes. Welcome to the forum. Bill
  18. I have owned my Onkyo TX-SR705(same as Integra DTR-6.8) since 2007 and it has been rock solid trouble free all these years. The DTR-5.8 is same as Onkyo TX-SR605. Not a whole lot of differences between the Integra and Onkyo versions except for Integra being more custom installer friendly. Though I have never owned an Integra AVR, I have owned their flagship universal player(non BD) and network stereo receiver and they have been wonderful pieces of gear. Bill
  19. That looks to be pretty ideal. My RF-63s are set at 60Hz and my RC-64 at 70Hz. Bill
  20. @Markwwwwhiuii, Welcome to the forum. The best is the frequency you end up with after experimentation. I let my auto EQ set the points and adjust from there. If setting up manually, start at 80 Hz for all and adjust accordingly. Do a little trial and error. Bill
  21. Maybe not "rock bottom" but reasonable. Bill
  22. I am unfortunately about to liquidate some speakers/gear. I am in Kissimmee/Saint Cloud and have a pair of birch raw Heresys I can let go. I do have Heresy 2s in walnut oil with cane grills I might part with. Thanks, Bill
  23. No. A 6 or 7 channel can but you will need a mulitchannel preamp or receiver to feed the amps. Bill
×
×
  • Create New...