UPDATE: UFO25's bridged mono driving the Zen Open Baffles

Now having had 3 days (
and a demo) under my belt with the Zen Open Baffle speakers I think I can make some comments.
I placed the speakers in a wide arc about 3 feet from the front wall. The toe-in was such that the intersecting X lands just in front of the listening chair. This is pretty much where I placed them at last years DECFEST for my “2-watt demo” that i like to do every year.
The 2-watt demo uses the Zen Open Baffle speakers in parallel with a 15 inch low-frequency driver passively crossed at 90Hz and at a 12dB per octave slope. Doing this adds an octave of low frequency information that extends to 22 Hz and a substantial amount of it making the resulting sound seem impossible to be generated by a 2 watt amplifier.
So that’s the back story and for the demo I set things up a bit differently. I used a pair of UFO25’s bridged mono into the Zen Open Baffles with no bass support. When I first tested the combo I was shocked at how much bass there was. It was more than I remember the speakers having during the 2 watt demo. The added power and weight of the bridged amps was definitely ensuring good bass performance which was my concern. The FRX2 drivers used in these speakers have detail and presence beyond all of our other speakers including the DFR8 drivers, so to balance such amazing hyper detail, good bass performance is needed.
My plan was to demo the speakers like this and see if the subject of bass augmentation comes up at any time during the demo.
So at this point it is still Wednesday night, and I am enjoying a nice test run and getting great sound. That’s when I remembered the bass on the Zen Open Baffles is determined by how loud they are turned up. The louder you play the speaker the fuller the bass response becomes. If you play the speakers quiet at a background level, the bass diminishes.
To drive the amplifiers, I used a ZCD240 hooked directly to the inputs of each amp with a pair of DSRII silver interconnects. The ZCD240’s output level was adjusted to max (7.75 volts) During the demo we mostly played CD’s, with a touch of memory stick tracks and some streaming from Linn Radio.
I set the level to comfortable, but full.. I would say around 1 or 2 dB louder than I do with a single 2 watt amp. The bass was good.
What does the ZOB bass sound like? It’s strong at 40 - 50 Hz and then rolls off a bit by the time it hits 80 Hz. This means that the speaker has a dryer sounding mid-bass than most speakers. If you hate bass bloat or boomy mid-bass, or you have a square room with 60Hz room-boom issues, you might love this speaker because no matter what the bass is ultra clean. The down side is that it will be more apparent when you come across a thin sounding recording.
What did it sound like? It sounded more real from 50 Hz on up than the DNA2’s. The presence is the same as electrostatic speakers but with more subjective velocity. There were several levels to this presence that we explored during the evening. There were as follows:
1) FRX2 drivers have a HI and NORM presence control switch on the back of each driver... or you could say they have NORM and LO switch depending on your perspective. We started with it in the lower setting.
2) The UFO25’s have a bias switch for the input tube that does exactly the same thing to the sound as the switch on the FRX2 drivers. We started in the lower setting.
3) The speaker impedance switch on the amplifiers also creates a very similar sounding effect between the two settings, and either setting runs the speakers without effort. We started in the lower setting.
You can amuse yourself with different combinations of these three settings, but I have found they are pretty cumulative. Start out with all the settings on the most laid-back mode and then as the night progresses add more presence until you're at maximum potential.
After several hours of listening the topic of subs did come up since the speakers don’t do ultra-low bass it eventually lead to conversations on how to properly augment the low bass and get it right the first time. Adding a powered subwoofer is not the answer, which is what most if not all people would tend to do. It was the gentelman's plan so I saved it with some education about integrating correct bass augmentation.
Rather than kill it with a powered solid-state subwoofer, adding a pair of pro-audio 15-inch drivers that have the same 96 dB of efficiency and putting them into a large tuned cabinet, one per side, is the best way to get the bottom octave correctly integrated without phasing issues and lagging issues caused from the low-efficiency high-mass home subwoofers.
To drive the subs nothing is needed, we just parallel them with the Zen Open Baffles and put a simple 12dB passive crossover set at 90 hz between the speaker and sub. The advantage of this is that the same amplifier is driving both speakers so the harmonics and signature and phase angle are absolutely perfectly integrated.
I ended up demonstrating this using a pair of 15 inch woofers in a pair of Imperial Folded Horn cabinets (SO version) and that set the stage for another several hours of listening. With this gigantic scale in the bottom end and effortless, deep, and fast not to mention 1000% seamlessly-integrated bass there was many head-shaking moment and from the adjacent spaces around the listening room the music felt and sounded real. The combo of non-compressed ultra-fast subterranean bass with the hyper detail of the FRX2 drivers in the ZOB is pretty hard to argue with.
The imaging on this setup has always been good, but with the UFO25’s it is so well focused you just couldn’t ask for better.
Since the demo ended on Thursday late night ( or maybe Friday morning I didn’t check) I have been hearing what the amps are truly capable of in the extreme low end, and all the way through the spectrum. With all the levels of presence I discussed earlier, we quickly migrated to everything all the way up for maximum presence because the amplifiers are so good, you just can’t over do it. Until hearing these amps on this combo, I have always ran the presence at less than full for what I felt was the best sound… so that is very telling on multiple levels.
When it comes to REAL bass, like this, where you can't see the woofer move, the cabinet is the size of a double door refrigerator and horn-loaded and there are two... my feelings are this:
If the music paints a mountain i would like to feel the mountain. I do not want to be restricted to music that only paints trees and bushes because that is the only thing I can reproduce.
And this brings me to a flash-back about these very horn-loaded bass cabinets I am using for the demo. Clearly the bass from these UFO25's bridged IS the best I have every heard from these cabinets. Simply stunningly perfect. Then suddenly I remembered hooking these same exact cabinets up to a 800 or 1200 watt solid state subwoofer amplifier from Parts Express and it was the most complete sonic disaster that you could have scripted. I couldn't get any rich deep bass out of the damn things without the woofers trying to flop out of the cabinets as they try to rip the surrounds of the cones. It was so obscene it gave me a migraine headache trying to adjust it to at least try to work right! After 2 hours of trying everything I could think of, I had to give up and send the amplifier away.
The following week after that hellish experience I built a 60 watt tube amp to drive both subs in mono and it worked gloriously and still does! In fact it sounded so good on music also, that I built two more as speaker amps and those are today our Zen TORII Mono's.
The point to all of this is even a single 2 watt Zen Triode Amplifier will absolutely embarrass the 1200 watt solid-state sub amp I tried. Not only sound quality, but bass output. They make the speakers just roll out this wonderful deep bass that is full and rich, and the solid state amp couldn't make it happen. A testament to output transformers on zero-feedback amplifiers vs. some feedback-laden solid-state output stages.
NOTE: Horn-loaded woofers are hard for some solid-state amplifiers to drive which is why the results were in this case as indicated.
NOTE: When you listen to similar speakers like Lowther and all the rest with lessor electronics (which could the norm by comparison) it becomes obvious that this is the sound they were hoping for. The detail is extreme. The textures in the low frequencies are just to die for. The liquidity and the overall balance makes for endless fatigue-free listening.
It's going to be hard to un-hook this setup and go back, but happily the DNA2's are as close to having both sounds in a single box as you're going to get, without the extreme presence, just real good presence.
The imperial horn itself has a spell that it casts upon you once you hear what the bass sounds like coming out of one... especially with the UFO25's! Look what it did to the cat!

-Steve