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ALK ES700T extreme-slope network ready for DIYers


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DIY Guys,

Here is the design for the 700 Hz extreme-slope crossover network. It is

intended for use in the Belle Klipsch or Klipsch LaScala using the Altec 811b

800 Hz "Voice of the Theater" horn and a wide range driver such as the Altec

902. It will NOT work in the Khorn! It was designed for the Klipsch K33

woofer driver which represents 6 Ohms in series with a 1 mHy inductor. Recent

tests show that it will operate with minimal degradation into most 8 Ohm

woofers however.

It is identical to the 600 Hz (ES600T) network except that the crossover

frequency is 100 Hz higher. Of course, anyone is welcome to duplicate these

networks for HIS OWN USE or for a personal friend. I reserve the right to

build them for sale.

The design for the ES600T (like the ES700T) has been updated to include bi-

wiring (NOT bi-amping) capability by removing two straps from the barrier

block.

The design may be downloaded from my web site

(http://www.alkeng.com/klipsch). The web site has been divided into several

sections with a menu on the left. Look for the "dump truck" download icon.

Al K.

AFTERTHOUGHT: I should remind everybody that the ES700 is only a woofer / squawker crossover (2-way). An additional squawker / tweeter crossover (at 6000 Hz) will be needed to run 3-way using the stock K55 and K77 setup.

post-2934-13819262036502_thumb.jpg

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DIY Guys,

I mentioned above that the ES700 network was designed to operate with the

Klipsch K33 woofer. Here's a plot (actual measurements) of the complex

impedance seen by the amp with 4 different woofer loads. The green curve is

the K33 equivalent (6 Ohms in series with 1 mHy voice coil inductance) and

clearly the nicest load for the amp. The others loads are not quite as good

but still good enough and all are nearly resistive. The crossover frequency

moves only about +-3 Hz with the different loads. The crossover loss is also

unaffected.

The vertical scale says 0 - 1 V/V. This represents 0 - 10 Ohms. The upper

plot is the impedance phase. -180 represents a pure capacitive impedance.

+180 indicates pure inductance. Zero is a purely resistive load.

I test it with these loads:

6 Ohms & 1 mHy <-- Designed for this (green curve).

6 Ohms & 1.6 mHy

8 Ohms & 1.6 mHy

8 Ohms resistive (No inductor).

Al K.

post-2934-13819262037462_thumb.gif

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"It will NOT work in the Khorn! It was designed for the Klipsch K33

woofer driver which represents 6 Ohms in series with a 1 mHy inductor."

Al am I missing something here? I thought the K33 was the woofer driver of choice for the Klipschorn, La Scala and Belle Klipsch.

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I will apologize in advance if you think this is a dumb question. I also am not trying to hijack this thread.

Al, Do you have any interest in designing an ES network for the late Cornwall. Is it even possible?

jc

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Sure it's possible, but we can't even get people to commit to buying Cornwall ALKs. I've had 5 or 6 inquiries since I started building them, but after I tell them the price, I don't even get a reply back. People pay around $800 for their Cornwalls, and most just aren't interested in dropping more than half that much on networks for them.

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Al,

I currently have your DIY ALK's Bi-Amped on Klipschorns and am interested in building your Extreme slope crossovers to use in Bi-Amp config. I use the stock K-401 midrange and JBL 2404H tweeter. Is that possible? If so would you mind in sharing the schematic with me? Also I would like to have the capability to use it as a 3 way crossover in the future by adding the 400Hz point.

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----------------

On 2/26/2005 4:54:53 PM Al Klappenberger wrote:

J.4,

Yep.. What your's missing is that this one crosses over too high for the Khorn woofer horn. The K33 driver is compatable but the crossover needs to be at 400 Hz for the Khorn. It requires the ES400 network. This is the ES700.

Al K.

----------------

Perhaps you should just jit me a little harder with the bat next time, can't beleive I missed that..."and the DUH award goes to..."

Thanks Al.

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Rigma,

I will eventually release the ES400 network for the DIY croud too, but for now, I have not built enough of them to be 100% sure the details are nailed down. BUT: You can't bi-amp with the extreme-slope netwroks anyhow! It is not a reasoable configuration. Passive networks like these a connected between a single amp and the speaker. Bi-amping requires the crossover be between the pre-amp and TWO power amps. You would need an ACTIVE crossover with 120 dB / octave slopes. Most are 24 db / octave at best. you can bi-WIRE however.

Al K.

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Al,

Sorry I was not as clear as I should have been. I do have an active (2-way) crossover set at 400hz. What I would like to do for now is to use your extreme slope for the crossover between the mid and tweeter only, say at around 5800hz

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" I think the ES700 should work on the Cornwall as is without any modifications. All that would be needed is to set the correct squawker taps. Of course a tweeter / squawker network would also be needed (just like with the Belle or LaScala) as the ES700 is a 2-way network."

Is there enough depth in a Cornwall cabinet to mount something like the 902 to the mid-horn using an adapter and try running them two way?

Shawn

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