From gabru@comsec.net Wed Jan 05 16:56:47 2011
Subject:RE: Speakers
...Yes...
From: CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com [mailto:CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Keith H Clark
Sent: Wednesday, January 05, 2011 3:39 PM
To: CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [CWSG] Speakers
Ramon,
You are incorrect that a speaker can't add frequencies. What about
speakers that won't properly produce a fundamental frequency but will
produce doubling instead of the fundamental? What about a driver at resonant
frequency that can produce almost double the output at resonant frequency
along with the 2nd harmonic of the fundamental?
From: CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com [mailto:CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of MON8169
Sent: Wednesday, January 05, 2011 1:13 PM
To: CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [CWSG] Speakers
to me the thing it to hear all the signal that comes out from the
keyboard, so you can correct the sound at the origin. No speaker system
will add any frequency that doesn't exist. They can have holes but never
peaks.
Ramon
-----Mensaje original-----
De: CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com ]
En
nombre de tonysounds
Enviado el: dimecres, 5 / gener / 2011 18:56
Para: CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com
Asunto: Re: [CWSG] Speakers
The thing to keep in mind there is the needs of a synthesizer will be
different than the needs of a clone.
"The meek shall inherit nothing." -FZ
"Hitting 'play' does not constitute live performance." -T
www.myspace.com/tonyorant
--- On Wed, 1/5/11, Steve Hayes
> wrote:
From: Steve Hayes
>
Subject: Re: [CWSG] Speakers
To: CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com
Date: Wednesday, January 5, 2011, 11:50 AM
Hi Gang
The secret to a great speaker system is this. The system needs to cover
the entire range of the keyboards. Without a hint of where the crossover
points are. The other detail is limit the low & the hi range to only
what the keyboard can produce.
Steven Hayes Sr Engineer / CEO
www.speakeasyvintagemusic.com
----- Original Message -----
From: MRK7421@aol.com
To: CloneWheel@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, January 05, 2011 12:18 PM
Subject: [CWSG] Speakers
Now we are getting somewhere...
In my post on Jan.1 ( ....there is room for improvement) I commented
that
if anything, we need to look at some of the speakers we have been using
on
clones AND digital pianos.
So I am in total agreement with Steve Hayes - the crossover points and
high
frequency drivers used to amplify our instruments are generally not
ideal
for what we are trying to achieve.
Why is it that guitar amps seems to be able to reproduce plenty of highs
from a single driver ? Do we really need to be able to achieve 20K in
the
high frequency area?
My Yamaha Nocturne piano at home uses two 4''X6" speakers and a
subwoofer.
There are no horns. It produces a very smooth response.... this is
probably
due to the fact that it is bi amped . Some of the other Yamaha home
pianos
use 6'' drivers and get most of the frequencies needed to replicate a
grand piano though the low end often suffers.
I am curious how others have dealt with this issue....
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