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Peter P.

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Posts posted by Peter P.

  1. If you unplug them from EVERYTHING, except an outlet of course, do they hum?

     

    If the hum disappears when they are completely disconnected, I suspect a ground loop. I would try running a ground wire from one or both speakers to your source equipment. Not permanently, but as a test. Or, you could try running a ground wire from one speaker to the other, as I see there's a ground lug point on the speaker.

  2. You don't say whether you tried another speaker. I'm assuming the overload protection is for individual speaker outputs and not global.

     

    Also, is it the same channel that goes into protection? If so, try swapping the speakers left for right and see if the problem follows the speaker.

     

    Trying another speaker, and the swap test, will tell you whether it's the Hereseys or your amp.

  3. Get yourself a single kg .5, 1.5, 1.2, or whatever, and you're good. You could try buying a just a horn and building a cheap high-pass filter. I don't think cabinet size will be critical. There are web sites that will show you how.

     

    I built a simple second-order high-pass filter for some satellite speakers using info found online and it worked fine.

     

    Sounds like it would be  a fun experiment. If you pull it off, don't forget to post your pride and joy!

  4. What I've noticed is bookshelf speakers, due to their distance from the floor, don't couple lower frequencies to the room, so a good portion of that tactile bass experience is lost.

     

    This was true in my case even when using 60lb. stands with spiked feet for solid coupling of the speaker to the floor.

     

    However, when by chance I placed those same 6.5" woofered speakers on the floor, the bass immediately improved, despite the low limit of my bookshelvers of 57Hz.

     

    Floorstanders often place their woofers close to the floor, which I feel is the secret trick to great bass reproduction and consequently a great musical experience.

     

  5. 2 hours ago, Ceptorman said:

    I think most people that use bookshelf speakers use them because of space limitations. And probably most bookshelf speakers are placed in or on cabinets. 

    And don't forget the Wife Acceptance Factor. That trumps all other limitations!;)

    • Like 1
  6. You have what 's called "port noise" and it's due to turbulent air exiting the port. It's a common design problem with ported subwoofers when played at higher volumes. Is is possible you're playing the subwoofer TOO loud? Perhaps if you moved the subwoofer CLOSER to the wall you could lower the volume, reducing port noise yet retaining the overall perceived volume of the subwoofer using the room's walls for bass reinforcement. You could also try experimenting with other locations for the sub, or perhaps changing the crossover frequency, which is a reach but won't hurt to try.

     

    You could try to exchange the subwoofer as defective but I don't think that will solve the problem as I'm inclined to think there's nothing wrong with the subwoofer.

     

    I think the ultimate solution for you is a sub with a passive radiator or an acoustic suspension subwoofer. Let us know if you cure your problem otherwise.

    • Like 1
  7. Those speakers are designed for the PA systems typically used in public buildings such as malls, hospitals, schools, etc.

     

    They are fed from a PA from the likes of a company such as Bogen, which will usually provide a 25V or 70V output. The reason is, the speakers will usually be a considerable distance from the sound source and it's less expensive to run smaller gauge wire long distances, and step the voltage down/current up at the speaker. Also, these PA amps are meant to drive many more speakers than the typical home sound system. The transformer provides a high input impedance, which makes connecting many speakers possible. The typical PA speaker will usually have a small transformer on it with multiple colored wires on the input or output, I forget. The wires follow a standard color code. One of those pairs of wires is usually for your typical 8 ohm load. You either connect the "taps" you need to the input wires or to the speaker. If your speakers lack those transformer "taps", then they may be designed ONLY for the PA output voltage you mentioned. If you can remove the wires from the transformer that connect to the speaker, and measure the resistance of the speaker with your voltmeter, and you find it's the typical 8/6 ohms, then don't use the transformer at all and connect your amplifier directly to the speaker. Throw away the transformer.

  8. 10 hours ago, BlueJester said:

    We went into the theater room with the P-39's, put on Gino Vanelli's Put the Weight on My Shoulders off of his The Best & Beyond CD, and my wife literally started crying.

    It's amazing that a speaker can move people to such emotion. I don't think there's any other brand that evokes such responses, and such passion and loyalty.

     

    Great story, greatly told.

    • Like 2
  9. 6 hours ago, Davis said:

    "This time at the dealer they asked me what I was listening to? Another gentleman nearby whose name was Victor (I think he was the mgr) told my salesman to get me a pair of Heresy. He then looked at me and said "Go home and try to blow these up, if you do, I will give you another pair". "

     

    That was funny as hell, and a great story to boot!

     

     

  10. On 1/2/2017 at 6:35 PM, jimjimbo said:

    @BEC and @Deang

     

    https://www.amazon.com/5000-Handheld-LCR-Meter-accessories/dp/B00S298KJO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1483399682&sr=8-1&keywords=der+ee+de-5000

     

    Received this meter today, and got out a bunch of new and old caps to measure.  Measured several values at test frequencies 100hz, and 1Khz.  All of these were on my bench and not in circuit.  What I would like to have is a couple of older caps that Bob has measured on his meter, so that I can compare to my meter readings.  I think this would be a good way to confirm accuracy.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Test

     

    Freq

     

     

     

    Brand

     

    Value

     

    Voltage

     

    Tolerance

     

    uF Read

     

    100hz ESR

     

    1Khz ESR

     

     

     

    Dayton

    2uf

    250v

    1%

    1.99

    0.0

     

    0.0

     

    New

    Dayton

    10uf

    250v

    1%

    9.98

    0.0

     

    0.1 ohm

     

    New

    Dayton

    30uf

    250v

    1%

    30.33

    0.0

     

    0.0

     

    New

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    New

    Dayton

    2uf

    250v

    5%

    1.98

    0.0

     

    0.04

     

    New

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    New

    Sonicap

    2uf

    200v

    < 5%

    2.04

    0.0

     

    0.0

     

    New

    Sonicap

    13uf

    200v

    < 5%

    12.71

    0.0

     

    0.0

     

    New

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    New

    Jantzen Cross Cap

     

    1.8uf

     

    400v

     

    5%

     

    1.77

     

    0.0

     

    0.03

     

    New

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    1.94

    8.7

     

    .96

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    2.06

     

    6.8

     

    .81

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    1.96

     

    6.0

     

    .84

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    2.14

     

    6.8

     

    .80

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    2.06

     

    6.6

     

    .74

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    2.08

     

    8.4

     

    .83

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    2.04

     

    8.0

     

    .85

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    1.96

    6.5

     

    .78

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    1.87

    6.3

     

    .80

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    2.05

    6.3

     

    .77

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    2.00

    5.8

     

    .78

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    2uf

    100v

     

     

    2.08

    11.6

     

    .95

     

    Old/used

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Aerovox

    3uf

    100v

     

     

    3.18

     

    4.1

     

    .60

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    3uf

    100v

     

     

    3.22

     

    6.4

     

    .84

     

    Old/used

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Aerovox

    4uf

    100v

     

     

    4.18

     

    3.0

     

    .48

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    4uf

    100v

     

     

    4.10

     

    3.0

     

    .55

     

    Old/used

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Aerovox

    8uf

    100v

     

     

    8.08

    4.5

     

    .33

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    8uf

    100v

     

     

    10.35

    4.1

     

    .60

     

    Old/used

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Aerovox

    20uf

    100v

     

     

    19.7

    .70

     

    .11

     

    Old/used

    Aerovox

    20uf

    100v

     

     

    19.4

    .50

     

    .10

     

    Old/used

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Aerovox

    30uf

    250v

     

     

    29.97

    .40

     

    .02

     

    Old/used

    All the caps you measured appear to be within 10%, new or used. Depending on the manufacturer's tolerances, they're likely within spec and those measured numbers are not unusual. I don't see anything wrong with them.

  11. 1 hour ago, Pats3of4 said:

    The face of the mid and tweet horn could use a respray but everything looks great inside the cabinet.

    I'd caution against respraying the horns.

     

    I don't know if this a popular thing to do but the most I would do is clean the horns with soap and water, then dry off to remove any potential water spots.


    I had a friend who painted a cowbell and noticed it changed the sound of the bell. I'd be afraid the same would happen to speakers.

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