DESIGN NOTES/OBSERVATIONS
It is the shadow created by the bottom (now top) of the speaker and the thick wood blocks under it that makes everything work. Rotating the lower wood block by 90 degrees deletes the shadow by allowing the driver to shoot sound directly on the wall behind the speaker which in turn reflects back to the listener. I tried this and the sound was artificially large, more open sounding and defocused.
The more open sounding was created by the absence of reflection from the lower block of wood coloring the sound in the lower midrange. This was easily fixed by leaning a piece of 2 inch foam in front of the block at an angle creating a diaphragmatic absorber. (not shown in the picture)
The box-less sound of open baffle is accomplished in this setup be keeping the rear wave energy from hitting the front wall. The white lines are showing the shape of the rear wave on both the floor and walls. This wavefront is largely absent of high frequency content eliminating the time smearing conflicts between the front and rear wave that would normally occur.
Initial listening tests have confirmed the imaging and soundstage are superior in this configuration to the obvious competition which is the open baffle set up the normal way.
A big advantage I hoped for with this design was to get a similar soundstage as I get from the HRv2 speakers when I am setting in a tall listening stool but when kicked back in the lower more comfy listening chair. That is exactly what I got, which is btw a little something I have been chasing since the original HDT design in 1991. The comb filtering effect that occurs on the floor between the speakers and listener are non-existent now.
Driver choice - knowing it probably wouldn’t be ideal I first tried the F15 driver, but I detected an urge to add a tweeter, and the bass which is so tight on that driver became over damped with such a close proximity to the floor. If you’re going to listen to a radial driver to sound flat the driver will have to have an on axis peak in the highs so I chose the Fast-15 which has just that. Also that driver has a softer suspension and the proximity to the floor actually tightens up the bass similar to the F15 in the ZF15L baffle. Also it drops a bit lower which is nice.
The bass is simply killer good - over the top good I would say. Clean, textured, open, musical, believable.
Everything is perfectly balanced so far as I can tell. It just sounds wonderful, the way I like it.
The irony is that I didn’t like the presence peak in the Fast-15, and missed the tight bass of the F15, and now the bass is tight and the peak is gone. No crossover, EQ, or manipulation, just this magic angle of 37.5 degrees and the distance from the cone to the floor.
Radial wave fronts - In real life there is never a sound that will hit your ear that emanates from a round cone other than a trumpet. Everything else is basically omni, so it is somewhat futile to expect to perfectly reproduce a 3D sound field with two cones, or even flat or curved panels because they are 90 degrees to the ground and real sound does not launch from a flat or curved plane exactly 90 degrees from the ground. Just making a case for radial speaker design. It sounds the most natural when done right.
This was a proof of concept and my thinking was that if successful figure out a way to do it in a tower speaker more like say the ERRx or something. Now that I know how to compute the angle it may be possible, but I can tell you now it will never sound like this. This is big and effortless with wrap around scale that just won’t come from anything else…
Also it is so rock solid 3D from everywhere, that if all speakers could do this, it might be worth asking the Audio Gods if it is possible to adjust the aperture and focal depth of the sound stage. The ability to soften the background and spotlight a certain depth would be control on a level no audiophile has ever experienced, myself included of course. But the focus and density I am getting from everywhere suggests that we could probably go to that level if we knew how with a speaker like this.
Getting any open baffle placed in the right spot has always been difficult from the stand point of getting that perfectly deep focused sound stage. The speakers really had to be in the exact right spot. Not these, these are easy. They are going to image far better in every case and in every room when compared to the standard vertical baffles.
It will be fun to watch peoples faces who listen to this. I've been hearing all kinds of stuff that I didn't know was there simply because the layering is so superior.
Happy listening : )
Steve