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JUST AN IDEA. MOD AN RF-3 TOWER TO BE USED AS A CENTER


Fast1

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Here is an idea some might like. In my mind, I cannot help but think a RF3 might not be ideal as a main but could certainly work well as a center with the larger horn dispersion, 8in drivers, and larger ported cabinet. I might like to see if I can find a cherry wood single so that I can do the mods to it. Since we own a CNC shop here, I would pull the front plate off the cabinet and redeisgn it so the cone drivers are on the outsides and the horn is in the middle. I would then try it but consider looking to change the crossover a bit to a 2.5way but it might work well as such.

If it works well, I would be happy to offer the new face plate if others wanted to try it.

Just thoughts anyway

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Those centre speakers with a woofer at each end are not actually the best way to configure a centre speaker, due to comb filtering issues. With RF-7 mains, your best centre speaker is another RF-7.

This image will show you how two horizontally separated sound sources that are producing the same signal will have areas of positive and negative interference, so it's better to have a single source for each sound, as in one woofer, one squawker and one tweeter.

post-23736-13819488844984_thumb.png

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I thought this was addressed with the Klipsch 2.5way crossover by giving each driver a different set of frequencies to produce with more overlap than in a typical 3 way system??

Would this problem not be present in all Klipsch centers?

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Not all of them. The Heresy was the world's first centre speaker, and it has one of everything. The Cornwall was used as a centre a little later, and it's sort of like a very big Heresy in its configuration. Quite a few folks are using La Scalas for centres, in various configurations, from stock, to stock lying on its side, to split industrials, to 402 JubScalas. That last one is for a really serious setup.

The sideways woofer-tweeter-woofer design is more for packaging convenience than for ultimate sound quality. It's easier to fit under or over a TV than a vertically-oriented speaker, so that's why most buyers go for it.

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