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Kevin S

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Posts posted by Kevin S

  1. I put ZERO thought into who does or does not like me or who finds me hard to get  along with”

     

    That’s really all that needed to be said. You are certainly entitled to treat the world any way you wish. But the world has a way of getting even. 

     

    Best of luck in the future. 

  2. I find that in general, people have unrealistic expectations and little empathy for people employed in service industries. Generally, I feel that people hold the people providing them services to standards that they themselves would be hard pressed to meet. Ironically, I find this has gotten progressively worse over the decades in conjunction with businesses trying to provide more and more services designed to minimize inconvenience to their customers. 

     

    As for the Amazons and other online sellers of the world, I am continually amazed at what they do and how well they do it. We use a variety of them often, for a wide variety of goods at a wide variety of prices. The problems have been minimal and resolved well within reasonable expectations. We’re Just lucky I guess.

  3. On 4/11/2020 at 1:41 PM, Edgar said:

    The frequency response curve shown on this link doesn’t worry me, even the apparent crossover related dips, I’ve seen highly thought of speakers with far worse. The distortion curves seem worrisome, especially for a Klipsch Heritage speaker. Are the distortion curves as bad as they look? Could something have been amiss with the speakers, or perhaps in the measuring technique?  

  4. 3 hours ago, f0rge said:

     

    Curious what your thoughts on the crossovers are.  First of all, do they need work?  Can those caps still be any good 43 years later? 

     

    I was thinking of buying a new set of Crites B2 crossovers and taking the original ones out completely and storing them.  

     

    Then maybe a new gasket for the mids and seeing where that gets me.

    Not having the skills myself, I would have the crossovers tested. If the components are still within specifications, I would leave them alone. My understanding is that it is entirely feasible that the crossovers could still be in spec. I am also aware that opinions on this vary widely. And discussing capacitors can be contentious at best. I would not just arbitrarily replace them. 

    • Like 1
  5. 1 hour ago, Todd W said:

    That was my thought also. I can’t imagine them sounding any better! Was just curious after a negative post about AB crossovers. Had to ask. 

    There are a lot of good things about forums such as this one. The one universal bad thing with forums is that someone will find fault with anything/everything. 

  6. 36 minutes ago, garthbernstein said:

    unfortunately, I have an A frame shed!

    Keep the speakers. Build a new shed! 😂 Just do the best you can to place them high up in whatever you have for corners, angled down into the listening area. I don’t think inverting them will matter with no solid surface available above the woofer. 

    • Haha 1
  7. I suspect that PWK is livid. Everything bad he envisioned happening in having others review and measure his speakers seems to have transpired with this review. He felt that all speakers were corner speakers. Yet his very own legendary corner horn speaker was both reviewed and measured without proper corner placement. IMO Klipsch should be embarrassed for allowing this sorry excuse of a review to have transpired. 

  8. 22 minutes ago, Edgar said:

     

    You know, that may very well be it. My old advertising copy is packed away somewhere, but I seem to recall mention in it of "32-foot wavelengths" (approximately 35 Hz). Though the nominal design cutoff of the Klipschorn is, IIRC, 40 Hz, it still manages useful output in the mid-30s.

    My recollection of my mid 80’s Khorns was a specified bandwidth of 32hz to 17khz, +/- 5db. It could have been 35hz though, my memory is not great.

  9. 1 hour ago, Arkytype said:

    Tony Martin and his team of "industrial designers" (or who ever is responsible) should be horsewhipped for turning the Klipschorn's classic appearance into a bad joke. By removing the "B-style" collar separating the bass horn from the upper housing, the balance and beauty of PWK's visionary styling has been  lost in favor of .......what exactly? According to Klipsch ad copy, they "....removed the inset collar or spacer...for a cleaner aesthetic appearance." 

     

    Oh, to have been a fly on the wall at that fateful design meeting in Indy! Fade up to a conference room where Tony Martin and his design team wizards are reclining in their Aeron office chairs sipping kale smoothies from the Klipsch vending service. "Hey Tony," says one of the minions wiping off his green mustache. "I know how we can save $39.45 in manufacturing costs on the K-Horn----let's eliminate that tacky collar and re-invent the Style C model! I can get us a deal on rubber feet to separate the bass horn from the top section. And, say, while we're making improvements to the K-Horn's looks, let's make it even taller by adding a four-inch ----no, make that a two-inch riser. That'll add to the WAF fer sure. Now, if you've got a minute, I've got some ideas for the Cornwall............" Fade to black.


    No, what they did was revive the old Style C Klipschorn which did not have the collar. Then, rather than attaching the upper assembly flush with the bass cabinet, they are using what looks to be round rubber equipment feet as spacers. Next, they'll want to enclose the back so you can use the Klipschorn away from the corner. Oh yeah, they already did that.

     

    Hey Rogelio, er Chief bonehead; how about showing us some curves of an enclosed Klipschorn cabinet several feet away from a corner compared to the proper corner location? 

     

     

     

    Lee

     

     

     

    new look.jpg

    Could you be any more disrespectful? I hope everyone at Klipsch ignores you, as they should. 

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 1
  10. I listen to music using DTS Neo 6 Music, with the surround speakers turned down 3db. My understanding is that DTS derives the center channel and surrounds without changing the signal to the L/R speakers. It’s my way of getting the 3 channel stereo experience. I turn down the surrounds to minimize the chance of localizing them, but still retain a bit of added ambience. 

     

     

    • Like 3
  11. “Why are there so few women audiophiles?”

     

    LOL! The answer to that question is staring back at male audiophiles in the mirror every morning. Just read any number of posts on this, or any other, audio forum. I think boorish might be an apt general description of far too many audiophiles and their posts. If a post like this one, which started out celebrating a female audiophile, can so quickly be driven into a ditch by men, (and this was fairly mild and innocuous), you have to ask the question why would any woman want to be an audiophile. The ladies who willingly put up with us, or even join us in this hobby, have a special kind of tolerance indeed. 

    • Like 1
  12. 4 hours ago, ODS123 said:

    To Beginners, my advice:

    1.  Your audio system quality is mainly about speakers, their placement, and room acoustics.
    2. The audible differences made by rest of your components, including amplifier cd player, DAC, cables/ power cords, power conditioner, etc.. are negligible.  So negligible, in fact, that there is considerable debate whether they are audible at all.  To wit: There was once a $10,000 reward offered to any golden eared audiophile who could consistently distinguish b/w two S/S amplifiers.  No one claimed the prize.
    3. Yes, people offer strong, highly opinionated anecdotal accounts here of how they changed X, then heard Y,  but credible, empirical evidence that these differences were not merely the result of expectation bias is sparse at best.
      • Put another way, just how relevant could such differences be if there is ANY debate at all about their existence?  If they were audible and they mattered they surely would be plain to the ear of every (non-hearing impaired) music lover.
    4. There are still good reasons to be selective about gear.  Chose an amp with enough power to drive your speakers to desired levels without distorting.  And chose one that offers the features you want and the look/ build-quality you want.  But set aside any notions that you must go about choosing amplifiers, cables, cd players, etc. the way a wine connoisseur goes about choosing wine.

    This basically corresponds with my 45+ years of experience in this hobby and is basically what I have recommended to “beginners” over the years. 

    • Like 1
  13. 2 minutes ago, Deang said:

     

    Mark Kaufman revamped the original line. I’m sure Roy was involved though, especially with the networks. 

    Well, there’s something I wasn’t aware of and a name I am not familiar with. Thanks for the clarification. 

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