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Tannoy dual concentric review
Tannoy dual concentric review




  1. Tannoy dual concentric review drivers#
  2. Tannoy dual concentric review driver#
  3. Tannoy dual concentric review plus#

One tier up from the multi-award winning ‘ Revolution‘ series, they build on the cheaper series’ already excellent reputation and add a few of their own tricks, to boot. One of two available floorstanding speakers (the 6.2 is the other), the range also consists of two pairs of bookshelf speakers for those with space at a premium. The subject of today’s review is the Precision range, namely the ‘ 6.4‘. Fortunately for us they’ve also got a few slightly keener priced ranges, too! Tannoy’s current top of the range model – the Westminster GR – has a retail price just shy of £28,000.

Tannoy dual concentric review drivers#

Over the years they’ve been responsible for numerous innovations in their field – chiefly their ‘dual concentric’ drivers that situate the tweeter in the ‘throat of the principal drive unit. With a history that stretches all the way back to 1926, the company, originally founded in London (now based in Scotland), has been one of the foremost home-loudspeaker manufacturers in the world ever since. Tannoy is a brand name.’ So synonymous is the company with the loudspeaker systems used for public address (PA) – dating all the way back to the Second World War – that the two are nearly inseparable. Like with many things, it's a matter of preference.Those familiar with the words of that venerable sage Alan Partridge, will no doubt remember the utterance ‘It’s like people who say Tannoy when they mean “public address system”. So concentric speakers have their strenghts and weaknesses.

Tannoy dual concentric review plus#

This design avoids the above-mentioned cabinet reflexions in turn it has to deal with horn colorations (hollow-space and multipath effects) plus a relatively directional high-frequency dispersion. On the other hand, the radiation is more uniform - the polar pattern lacks the typical dips and humps of multi-way speakers (due to interferences) -, which can improve the spatial focus and increase 3-dimensionality.īTW, Tannoy uses a horn tweeter within the woofer, whose horn length is meant to equalize the phase shift due to the crossover network. This will compromize 3-dimensionality and realism. Compared to a stand-alone tweeter (without a baffle), high frequencies are usually radiated in a narrower angle, which means reduced high-frequency wall reflexions in comparison to mids and lows. The reflexions can even be (frequency-)modulated by the woofer's membrane movement. Thus the signals are slightly smeared, and there's a certain degree of coloration from the hollow-space effect. A fundamental weakness of this concept is the reflexions of the tweeter's sound waves on the cabinet top.Īs seductive as a concentric speaker looks like (more homogeneous radiation pattern), it suffers from a similar effect: The sound waves radiated by the tweeter are reflected in the woofer cone. The goal of the «time alignment» thing is to compensate for the phase shift due to the capacitor-induced high-pass filter in the case of the tweeter and the inductor-induced low-pass filter in the case of the squawker/woofer, not frequency-dependent runtimes of sound waves. Because if speaker manufacturers think high frequencies travel through the air faster than low ones, they might need to reread the high school physics books. I sure hope the time alignment is to compensate for faster response by the tweeter itself. Originally Posted by Rempert /img/forum/go_quote.gif Right after the Aurum monitors, the Aerials kicked my ass down the street. The Aerial 7s sound dynamite for 2-driver speakers. The Maggies were very fine, and the Aurum Cantus monitors were very clean, but my old Spicas and Ruarks sounded more 'natural'. I can't get into the impact of treble and high-bass unless I get the sense that it's been expressed, exploded, expectorated, expelled from some particular point. My experience of electrodynamic speakers is that they are fluid, expressive, but unfocused. I've owned Maggies and two other pairs of speakers that had ribbon tweeters. I don't even see one that does *not* have that 3rd driver.

Tannoy dual concentric review driver#

One worry I might have with the tannoy is - are replacement parts expensive? can you recone the surround or do you have to junk the whole driver?Īnd if the concentric design was so great, why did they break it in the current 3 driver series? that seems to be what's in stock at the pro audio stores if you search for tannoy and concentric monitors. magnapan mmg (the mailorder $500ish ones). Originally Posted by linuxworks /img/forum/go_quote.gifįunny you say that, I have planars now (I think they qualify).






Tannoy dual concentric review