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02-25-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
haralanov


Bulgaria
Posts 130
Joined on 05-20-2008

Post #: 51
Post ID: 13008
Reply to: 10659
Sound result is directly related to constructor's understanding
fiogf49gjkf0d
 be wrote:
I just spoke with a guy who have made both permanent magnets and electro magnets for loudspeakers.
He said that the reason that electro magnetic speakers have a smoother and more grain free sound, is due to the temperature rise in the mechanical parts of the magnet

Be, excuse me for my honesty, but your friend has absolutely no idea what and why he is doing. To make such a moronic statement is pure evidence that he doesn't know how the voice coil wire interacts with the magnetic lines and how those lines "bend" when they "see" the constantly changing magnetic field generated from the voice coil when driven with transient from the amplifier.  It seems he doesn't know what "hysteresis" means and also he doesn't know how to PROPERLY build good sounding electomagnet system.  Good sounding electromagnets are not just simple pile of coils and iron parts. I also agree there are some very poor sounding field coil speakers, but that's not because of the topology, but because of wrong implementation of that topology.

Best regards,
Haralanov



"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." -A.E.
02-25-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
be
Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts 86
Joined on 02-12-2007

Post #: 52
Post ID: 13010
Reply to: 13008
Friendly magnets
fiogf49gjkf0d

Hi Haralanov.

My "friend" said that he made an experiment where he heated a permanent magnet up and thereby made it sound more like a field coil magnet, both with the same front.

If we can take this claim as true, it is evidence that the acoustical-mechanical vibrational properties of a transducer depends on the temperature, this is not counter intuitve to me, especially with the mechanical interfaces causing damping and the temperature dependent softening of glues and insolation of speech coil etc.
I dont think this would be the only explanation, obviously the magneto-hystersis properties of the hard and soft iron parts could in adition be as, or more important.

Regards
be

02-25-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
haralanov


Bulgaria
Posts 130
Joined on 05-20-2008

Post #: 53
Post ID: 13011
Reply to: 13010
The roots of the things
fiogf49gjkf0d
Be, I have made a lot of experiments and I confirm that if a permanent magnet (Ticonal, Alnico5, Alnico3SC) is heated up, the sound gets a little softer, but the typical "screamyness" is still there as if the sound comes from a very little zone, stuffed and compressed in the middle of the speaker with tizzing top octave response (no matter what is the value ot magnet density in the gap), as it shoots with laser gun right in your eyes. This is true even when you heat up the iron parts around the voice coil. Good field coil speaker (and i repeat most of them are pure garbage) not only sound "free from grain", but it allows you to hear very subtle nuances of the original acoustics of the environment in which the musicians have been recorded, so you have feeling for looking much deeper in the recording. The musical phrases become more meaningful, not only flying sounds, but the notes have relationship with each other. Of course the industry offers very expensive and mistaken speakers with low impedance electromagnets, working with low voltages and high current. Good motor run with low current and more turns, so if somebody hear expensive field coil and he did not like the sound, that's not because the field coils in general do not sound good, but the reason is that he is beeing exposed to a crappy driver made from exotic materials. And yes, good electromagnet driver HAS much denser harmonic content (assuming the dynamics are not restricted).

I will quote Mr. Oleg Rullit:
 rullit wrote:
Good field coil speakers mean an entirely different dimension in music reproduction. If I compared ferrit to tap water, AlNiCo would have more or less the range of a middle or maybe, depending on the material of the magnetic wire, high class mineral water, while field coil, manufactured properly and correctly would be the equivalent to mountain water you get directly from the source.



"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." -A.E.
02-25-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
be
Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts 86
Joined on 02-12-2007

Post #: 54
Post ID: 13012
Reply to: 13011
!
fiogf49gjkf0d
Hello Haralanow.
The diference you observed between high and low impedance fieldcoils, where they in the same unit and did you use the same kind of power supply? 
Regards
Erik
02-25-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 55
Post ID: 13014
Reply to: 13011
While educating ourselves about the things....
fiogf49gjkf0d

Haralanov,

I would not make any assumption about be’s friend who proposed that the heating up magnet describes the major difference between perm and electromagnet. In fact what he proposed I find very stimulating and to a degree might be very plausible.

I think to confirm it would be necessary to measure an electromagnet driver as soon it went off and then an hour later after it heat up. Why where do you see the people who use electromagnet are trying to talk about facts? They, at least that hat I have seen, mostly stress the “much deeper emotional involvement with music”. Ironically the each time I visited the people with electromagnet inhalation I witnessed that they listed predominately garbage and have musical demand of very limited complexity.  Haralanov, I do not mock you, I juts report the facts of my past experiences.

What I have seen was that electromagnet do have own different sound but I would not describe it as “denser harmonic content” or something that would make the “musical phrases more meaningful”. In fact I personally feel that to a large degree all those comments about advances of electromagnet harmonics come from the facts that the electromagnets are more rolled off at the competitive flux force. Look for instance you, Haralanov, report:

“…typical "screamyness" is still there as if the sound comes from a very little zone, stuffed and compressed in the middle of the speaker with tizzing top octave response …. as it shoots with laser gun right in your eyes. “

They are fear accusation if it is what it is but it is not my expense with my Alnico drivers. In fact my experience with them is that they are lush and very elegant. The harmonic density is to a large degree is the subject of the output tube loading. If your tube runs too idle then you might have the sound you have described. Take your driver with “tizzing top octave response” and short if with a few watt resistors – this will load the tube harder and will take the edge off your divers (as a temp solution). Alternatively run a shit of toilet paper over your driver and see how the transients got eaten. Ironically right alone with subduing of unreasonable transients we got the “denser harmonic content” but pay attention that we do not change magnet yet.

What I am trying to say is that in my view methodologically you all guys do a mistake by comparing badly performing perm magnet drivers with badly performing electromagnet. What you need to do instead is to get the identically good sound from perm magnets and electromagnet and then to observe what one topology can do and another can’t. To comment that one driver sounds screamy and tizzy but another sound “better” is in my view not serious and disrespectful not only to the subject of conversation but also to own time we spend to educate ourselves about the things.

Rgs, Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
02-25-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
haralanov


Bulgaria
Posts 130
Joined on 05-20-2008

Post #: 56
Post ID: 13015
Reply to: 13014
Some further explanations
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
Haralanov, I do not mock you, I juts report the facts of my past experiences.

No, you do not mock me. My experience is exactly the same.
 Romy the Cat wrote:
In fact I personally feel that to a large degree all those comments about advances of electromagnet harmonics come from the facts that the electromagnets are more rolled off at the competitive flux force. Look for instance you, Haralanov, report:
“…typical "screamyness" is still there as if the sound comes from a very little zone, stuffed and compressed in the middle of the speaker with tizzing top octave response …. as it shoots with laser gun right in your eyes. “


My description about the sound of drivers using permanent magnets was quite exaggerated. Actually the good ones (with perm magnets) sound exactly as you just described – “they are lush and very elegant”, but ONLY if the listener has not listening experience with really good field coils. If you hear really serious performing driver with electromagnet, you will very soon realize what I wanted to say.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
Take your driver with “tizzing top octave response” and…

My driver has not even a single trace of  tizzing top end. Tizzines is intrinsic feature of ribbon drivers (including RAAL), not of well designed paper drivers. Actually, the heart of my acoustic system is ultra high performing midrange – high midrange driver with central alnico magnet, wooden spider and leather surround. You could see it here:   http://bgaudio.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=17682

Now I’m listening to even better drivers (field coil) powered with 10 x 12V accumulators. You can see a close shot of the paper it uses:

IMG_2530.jpg
 Romy the Cat wrote:
What I am trying to say is that in my view methodologically you all guys do a mistake by comparing badly performing perm magnet drivers with badly performing electromagnet.
Badly performing drivers are out of my scope.
 be wrote:
The diference you observed between high and low impedance fieldcoils, where they in the same unit and did you use the same kind of power supply? 

Nope, I have never made such a comparation, because therе is reason why low voltage motor do not perform at the level of  high voltage motor. I will not go into further discussion why it is so.

Best regards,
Haralanov


"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." -A.E.
02-25-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 57
Post ID: 13016
Reply to: 13015
Unless one heard the thing…
fiogf49gjkf0d

 haralanov wrote:
My driver has not even a single trace of  tizzing top end. Tizzines is intrinsic feature of ribbon drivers (including RAAL), not of well designed paper drivers. Actually, the heart of my acoustic system is ultra high performing midrange – high midrange driver with central alnico magnet, wooden spider and leather surround. You could see it here:   http://bgaudio.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=17682

Now I’m listening to even better drivers (field coil) powered with 10 x 12V accumulators. You can see a close shot of the paper it uses…

Haralanov, your diver might be a very good MF diver but it does not go to region where the “tizzing” live. It just has too large and to heavy diaphragms for it. You can take driver from 30 and 40s (Telefunken, Klangfilm, Tesla and few others) and accommodate them for MF. They have similar to your diver paper structure and generally they sound fine. However, you can’t not make the claims that those drivers does not do “tizzing” as they are juts MF diver and perform more or less comfortable in sub 7kHz area. What you saying is similar to somebody saying that a compression driver tweeter does not have the “boomy baas”.  I also disagree with ribbons. Tizzines is not an intrinsic feature ribbons, it might be if ribbons are not properly used. But anything if not properly used sound like shit…

The better field coil driver powered with 10 x 12V accumulators? Hm, you claim that you were not able to make a PS that would power your driver to a sufficient level of sound? Are you sure about it? At 12V you can use 5F-6F car capacitors that shall cancel any PS influence… I do not know, the buttery-powered electromagnets is too unpractical in my view.  I do like your diver, the suspensions is very cool but still it is very difficult to evaluate how effective all of it and how it sound in reality unless one heard the thing.

The caT


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
02-26-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
haralanov


Bulgaria
Posts 130
Joined on 05-20-2008

Post #: 58
Post ID: 13017
Reply to: 13016
:)
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
your diver might be a very good MF diver but it does not go to region where the “tizzing” live.

You may not believe me, but the driver start to  roll off (very smoothly) after 14kHz and at 20kHz is at -6dB. I intentionally do not use it so high, because I have ultra light weight alnico paper tweeter: http://www.bgaudio.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=9833971#p9833971 
So my eliptical driver is able to reproduce almost all of the high frequency information, and as I already said - without any trace of harshness.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
It just has too large and to heavy diaphragms for it

The diaphragm do not work as a piston, but it features a progressive fracturisation, and this is the only way to get a proper and natural sound with direct radiators. According to your assumption that it is heavy - the diaphragm and voice coil assembly weight exactly 4,4 grams, so it can reproduce effortlessly transients and critical upper midrange - low HF zone.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
(Telefunken, Klangfilm, Tesla and few others) ... However, you can’t not make the claims that those drivers does not do “tizzing” as they are juts MF diver and perform more or less comfortable in sub 7kHz area.

I completely argee with that statement!

 Romy the Cat wrote:
you claim that you were not able to make a PS that would power your driver to a sufficient level of sound? Are you sure about it? At 12V you can use 5F-6F car capacitors that shall cancel any PS influence

My field coils are powered ot 120V, not at 12V, and the batteries are wired in series

 Romy the Cat wrote:
it is very difficult to evaluate how effective all of it and how it sound in reality unless one heard the thing.

Welcome in Bulgaria, you might learn a lot about Absolute Tone Smile


"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." -A.E.
02-26-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 59
Post ID: 13018
Reply to: 13017
Care to educate?
fiogf49gjkf0d

 haralanov wrote:
You may not believe me, but the driver start to  roll off (very smoothly) after 14kHz and at 20kHz is at -6dB. I intentionally do not use it so high, because I have ultra light weight alnico paper tweeter: http://www.bgaudio.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=9833971#p9833971 
So my eliptical driver is able to reproduce almost all of the high frequency information, and as I already said - without any trace of harshness.

Of course it has no “trace of harshness” – it has too heavy cone to operate in the zone where harshness might take place. Yes, the diaphragm does not work as a piston as the properly implemented break-up might do very good job. I also have no doubts that your driver goes to 14kHz and has -6dB at 20kHz.  However, the question is not how far it goes but what kind HF it reproduce, if it possible to get the same 14kHz from another dedicated HF driver and if those “dedicated” HF might be better in quality. My experience shows that use of light cone MF drivers and to push them into HF does not produce the stimulating enough HF. Even if you got some kind of very unique cone, and 4.4g (with suspension) shall be very good, then how low you driver this 4.4g cone? Thins about the Doppler and intermodulation distortion for this type of the driver… Anyhow, it is not my philosophy to try pushing a driver to work in widest bandwidth – I truly see no reason to do it. You can put on cello the short strings and try to play soprano or mezzo violin, the question would be why one need it to play a quarter? The whole point to have 4 individual instruments in a quarter is because when they play together then the combination of them gives birth of new interesting possibility, particularly in the moments of complex polyphony. Anyhow, your accomplishment with this MF driver might be very good for what you are looking for but it is not a direction that I personally find perspective. All my experiences with similar topology that you advocate lead me to confirmed it.

 haralanov wrote:
My field coils are powered ot 120V, not at 12V, and the batteries are wired in series

THAT is VERY interesting in context of this thread. I did not pick it up while you were talking above with “be” about impedance that your driver use 120V magnetizing coil. Do you see advantages in it? A am not sure that I do. OK, less current but who cares? From different perspective you shall have much more isolation on coil to handle high voltage. I do not think it is a problem as well. So, what the advantage? When you were talking about high voltage motors I did not realized that it is 120V!!!! To do it you shall have a coil with high amount of DCR and it would tale a LOT of copper to wind. More turns would make more layer and more layer would make the external layers be less affective from perspective of flux/temperature ration.  I do not know how it all works, I would need to consult with my coil people but I do not immediately see any advantage to go for high voltage in electromagnet. Care to educate me on the subject?

Rgs, Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
02-26-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
haralanov


Bulgaria
Posts 130
Joined on 05-20-2008

Post #: 60
Post ID: 13019
Reply to: 13018
Field coils and voltages
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy, I will not comment the first part of your post, because it will be offtopic. Let concentrate on the subject of field coils and particularly on the difference between high impedance high voltage fieldcoils and those using thick low impedance wire working with very low voltages. If you ask an engineer about the subject, he will reply that there is no difference and only the value of “Ampere/turns” is the important factor. I wish the things were simple like that Smile
Some time ago you made wonderful analogy on the subject of SETs and low sensitivity speakers:

 http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?postID=3688#3688
 Romy the Cat wrote:
Take (hypothetically only!) your Cat or if you are less lucky your dog. Dump her in bathtub, wash he with soup. Then dry your pet with towel. Then put your pet on a middle of carpet and looks at her fur. It is wet and it is not stick out as it should. Now begin to dry your pet with hair blower for instance. The dryer the pet’s fur will be the more distinctive and the more spatial each individual practical of hair will be. The very same is with upper MF and SET amplifiers.

And the very same is with electromagnets. With those so widely used 12V power supplies (Fertin, Feastrex for instance) the sound is always softer than it should be in reality with severally restricted dynamics and transient response. But the people seems to like it...


"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." -A.E.
02-26-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 61
Post ID: 13020
Reply to: 13019
The high voltage remedy?
fiogf49gjkf0d

 haralanov wrote:
And the very same is with electromagnets. With those so widely used 12V power supplies (Fertin, Feastrex for instance) the sound is always softer than it should be in reality with severally restricted dynamics and transient response. But the people seems to like it...

I agree that each and single electromagnets driver that I head was dull and with restricted transients, something that the unfortunate filedcoil devotee mistakably call “harmonically rich”.

So, you feel that high voltage filedcoil do excite the electromagnets driver somehow? If some then I think if would be worth to try to experiment with high voltage electromagnet.

I will make a few inquires with my cold people and will see if they would propose any rational for it. In any case it might be a good idea to wind a high impedance coil around my S2 driver and to see what it will be able to show off. What voltage you feel is appropriate? Was your selection of 120 was some kind of arbitrarily?  If 120V is better then 12V then why not the 380V for instance? You went to the troubles to use DC battery to drive your 120V coils, why DC battery? How in your view the advantage of DC battery supply relates to the advantage of the high voltage supply? If we accept my above association with a wet Cat as accurate then can your extend that association to the use of DC battery power?

Rgs, Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
02-26-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
cv
Derby, United Kingdom
Posts 173
Joined on 09-15-2004

Post #: 62
Post ID: 13021
Reply to: 13020
High vs low voltage field coils... irrelevant?
fiogf49gjkf0d
Well, as I see it, one can consider the voice coil a primary and the field coil a secondary of a big transformer.

I can see how a low voltage coil with low resistance via the PSU (which batteries certainly have) could therefore sound different from the high Z variant.

But I wonder if, Haralanov, you have experimented with current sourcing the coils - I would imagine that this would vastly reduce the differences you are hearing (Romy - do try that first with the S2 before you go for a high voltage coil).

The other thing is that if the driver is well designed, it will probably have a copper shorting ring that would render all this stuff moot.

That's just my theory. In practice, I think Dave Slagle is in the process of making some low impedance coils for what was a high impedance driver, so he may have the answers, both theoretical, and soon, practical: http://www.hifiheroin.blogspot.com/
(see the Wireman post)

Anyway, just some thoughts...

02-26-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
haralanov


Bulgaria
Posts 130
Joined on 05-20-2008

Post #: 63
Post ID: 13022
Reply to: 13020
Another 2 cents
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
So, you feel that high voltage filedcoil do excite the electromagnets driver somehow?

I will not call this exitation, let say it dynamic stability.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
What voltage you feel is appropriate?

It very much depends of the S2's magnetic circuit topology and the free space you hаve inside the driver. There are too much factors to consider.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
If 120V is better then 12V then why not the 380V for instance?

The higher, the better, but in that case you need entirely different magnet system design. So you have some limits. I have never disassemled Vitavox S2 driver and I don't know what will be the proper solution to convert it to electromagnet. I'm in the process of constructing massive (over 15" high) field coil, with more than 28000 meter of copper wire, working at 800V DC and made of Armco ultra low carbon iron.

 Romy the Cat wrote:
You went to the troubles to use DC battery to drive your 120V coils, why DC battery?

I'm using accumulator power supply for purely sonic reasons. It is very very pure. The only drawback is that the accumulators need to be charged with every 90-100 hours of use. I even use 80uF non-electrolytic russian military capacitors attached to the back of the magnet system and wired directly to the field coil terminals.

 cv wrote:
But I wonder if, Haralanov, you have experimented with current sourcing the coils - I would imagine that this would vastly reduce the differences you are hearing

I will do that IF some day I hear something that I do not like in the sound and only if the reason is related to the power supply. Right now I do not have any motivation to change something because there is absolutely nothing annoying in sound of my FC driver.

 cv wrote:
  Dave Slagle is in the process of making some low impedance coils for what was a high impedance driver, so he may have the answers, both theoretical, and soon, practical: http://www.hifiheroin.blogspot.com/
(see the Wireman post)

Sorry, but this guy do not make changes based on sonicaly related reasons, so his actions are absolutely irrelevant to me. He said (quote taken from the link above):

 Wireman wrote:
and decided to take them from high voltage to low voltage for safety reasons.

And this is the most moronicaly thing I have ever heard! All of them do that for "safety" reasons (not because of the Sound they want to accomplish) which is very very sad in fact.

Best Regards,
Haralanov




"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." -A.E.
02-26-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
cv
Derby, United Kingdom
Posts 173
Joined on 09-15-2004

Post #: 64
Post ID: 13023
Reply to: 13022
In defence of Dave...
fiogf49gjkf0d
Mr H,
I had a look at your drivers on your links - very interesting! Wish I could hear your work there, I can imagine it is rather special.

That said, I must address a couple of your points:

1) The safety issue:
Dave is about the most "sound uber alles guy" I know; you should see his previous clip lead and mercury steups. Yet, I don't think the "safety" aspect may be neglected; I suspect he feels more comfortable with coils running at low voltage than (what I guess was) 200-400V or so. Even with earthing, you cannot fault the logic here. Whilst I will take risks with crazy voltages etc for myself, I will not subject others to them, no matter what potential sonic benefits.

2) Sonically related reasons:
Don't change anything unless you have a desired sonic end result is a fine maxim of Romy's; the safety issue above aside, I have yet to hear a system that sounds real, or elicit a more intense response; thus, I believe that any experimentation is worthwhile, as long as its interpretation and assessment is honest. Obviously, targeted experimentation is preferable, but let's not pretend that progress never came from the occasional stab in the dark. So if something interesting comes out of a change that is motivated by making things safer, than why not?

In any case, *very* interested to hear more about your devices, particularly the long fibre paper cones and leather suspension - are you willing to divulge more?

cheers

02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
haralanov


Bulgaria
Posts 130
Joined on 05-20-2008

Post #: 65
Post ID: 13024
Reply to: 13023
Safety or Sound?
fiogf49gjkf0d
 cv wrote:
Yet, I don't think the "safety" aspect may be neglected; I suspect he feels more comfortable with coils running at low voltage than (what I guess was) 200-400V or so.

Yes, you are right. But it must not be at the expense of the Sound. If we follow that logic, then why people use tube amplification with more than 20-30V? Why some of them experiment with more than 1200V? Smile)

 cv wrote:
Whilst I will take risks with crazy voltages etc for myself, I will not subject others to them, no matter what potential sonic benefits.

So you will have better sound than others, if all other things are being equal.

 cv wrote:
Obviously, targeted experimentation is preferable, but let's not pretend that progress never came from the occasional stab in the dark. So if something interesting comes out of a change that is motivated by making things safer, than why not?

Don't you think some of the old dirvers use high voltages (some of them 250V) for their electromagnets because of a very rational reason?

 cv wrote:
In any case, *very* interested to hear more about your devices, particularly the long fibre paper cones and leather suspension - are you willing to divulge more?

When I finish the assembling of my new driver, I will post a dedicated topic about those aspects with explanations for my motivation to make the things the way they are and I will post some pictures.

Cheers,
Haralanov



"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." -A.E.
02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
audiofilofine
Posts 29
Joined on 02-26-2010

Post #: 66
Post ID: 13025
Reply to: 13019
Hi. i'm audiofilofine from italy and theese are my field coil
fiogf49gjkf0d
are pair of jbl 2420
work with 100-130 volt
power supply is with 5u4 tube
i use with diy tactrix horn and jensen field coil woofers.
crossover at 800 hz 6 db or when use 3 way multiamplification 800-8000
in this case tweeter is old jensen-magnavox.

no sell driver





02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
audiofilofine
Posts 29
Joined on 02-26-2010

Post #: 67
Post ID: 13026
Reply to: 13020
My field coil driver
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
 haralanov wrote:
And the very same is with electromagnets. With those so widely used 12V power supplies (Fertin, Feastrex for instance) the sound is always softer than it should be in reality with severally restricted dynamics and transient response. But the people seems to like it...

I agree that each and single electromagnets driver that I head was dull and with restricted transients, something that the unfortunate filedcoil devotee mistakably call “harmonically rich”.

So, you feel that high voltage filedcoil do excite the electromagnets driver somehow? If some then I think if would be worth to try to experiment with high voltage electromagnet.

I will make a few inquires with my cold people and will see if they would propose any rational for it. In any case it might be a good idea to wind a high impedance coil around my S2 driver and to see what it will be able to show off. What voltage you feel is appropriate? Was your selection of 120 was some kind of arbitrarily?  If 120V is better then 12V then why not the 380V for instance? You went to the troubles to use DC battery to drive your 120V coils, why DC battery? How in your view the advantage of DC battery supply relates to the advantage of the high voltage supply? If we accept my above association with a wet Cat as accurate then can your extend that association to the use of DC battery power?

Rgs, Romy the Cat


http://it.tinypic.com/view.php?pic=2k0eic&s=6

this are my field coil driver

100-130 volt
tube power supply
use with diy tactrix horn
no sell
02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 68
Post ID: 13028
Reply to: 13025
The high voltage electromagnets…
fiogf49gjkf0d

 haralanov wrote:
I will not call this excitement, let say it dynamic stability.

Hm, the “dynamic stability”. This is a new objective…

 cv wrote:

I suspect [David]he feels more comfortable with coils running at low voltage than (what I guess was) 200-400V or so.

David had commented on this in private email. He looks like has no attitude about it and will be experimenting with it.

 cv wrote:
In any case, *very* interested to hear more about your devices, particularly the long fibre paper cones and leather suspension - are you willing to divulge more?

Yes, the driver is very good and it is long know that a properly made leather suspension is the most interesting for MF drivers. The problem is that those cones is VERY difficult to get nowadays, I guess Haralanov use some kind very old diaphragms that he took from old driver. Those cones are not being made like this nowadays.

  haralanovwrote:
Don't you think some of the old dirvers use high voltages (some of them 250V) for their electromagnets because of a very rational reason?

Haralanov, Haralanov, let do not mislead ourselves. The old drivers use high voltages for electromagnets not due to the sonic reasons but because economic reasons. They use fieldcoil of electromagnets combined with input choke filter of power supply for the entire unit. I have to note that all of drivers where high ripples just after rectifiers go into fieldcoil of electromagnets sound bad if they used “as is”. I do have quite many of them.

 audiofilofine wrote:
are pair of jbl 2420
work with 100-130 volt
power supply is with 5u4 tube
i use with diy tactrix horn and jensen field coil woofers.
crossover at 800 hz 6 db or when use 3 way multiamplification 800-8000
in this case tweeter is old jensen-magnavox.

Audiofilofine, I am sure you have compared the permanent magnet JBL 2420 with 2420 electromagnet. Would you mind to share your observations?

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
audiofilofine
Posts 29
Joined on 02-26-2010

Post #: 69
Post ID: 13029
Reply to: 13028
2420 field coil
fiogf49gjkf0d
yes romy but my english is bad

The JBL 2420 alnico sweet sound with my trumpet tactrix not felt the need for a tweeter, but the high was a bit behind. with the field coil at 100 volts sounds almost equal all'alnico but increasing to 130 volts, so that the solenoid heats up well and reaches a temperature of about 60-70 degrees, the sound opens, the highs are present, detailed never annoying. I think it is important to the heat of solenoide.toccando driver after half an hour playing you hear a pleasant heat, like the human body. Jensen woofer coupled with the efficiency are the same and do not serve relaxations. I used the google translator I hope that we can understand what I wrote.
ciao
02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 70
Post ID: 13030
Reply to: 13029
Just guessing what is going on in your case.
fiogf49gjkf0d
So, I guess you do not measure flux if are getting. You might measure sensitivity and we might presume what when perm magnets has the same sensitivity as electromagnets then the drivers have the same magnetic flux density. Let also presume that when you report that “at 100 volts sounds almost equal” then you have equalized flux and the drivers output. I think you do not see a lot of HF restrain with electromagnet because the JBL 2420 is not so strong HF performer and it rolls off relatively fast, right after 9K-10K. So, you drive your electromagnet with more voltage (in fact with more current) that yields more flux and to “stiffer” sound. Then you wait until the driver warm up and soften sound to the level you like.

Here is in my view is the most interesting thing happen. I am in contrary to haralanov do not deny the proposal of the be’s friend that heat might do magnetic benefit (softening). The key question would be in my view if heat induces mechanical benefit of magnetic benefit. If we were are taking about the drivers like Vitavox with new diaphragms or Goto or any other driver what a metal cone surrounded with softer syntactic suspension then I would undeniably felt that the temperature-susceptive plastic suspension doe warmed and change sound. However, the diaphragm in the small JBL 2420 driver is full metal (correct me if I am wrong) and there is absolutely nothing in that driver that might be soften mechanically. So, there is a very high possibility that a hot magnet radiate some kind of different flux that makes some kind of difference. That is the qestuion that I would like to keep as opened question.

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 71
Post ID: 13031
Reply to: 13030
Something more about the “hot magnet” theory.
fiogf49gjkf0d
I would like to expense a bit on my post above. If we presume that a warmed up, hot magnet (electromagnet) radiate a magnetic field of different type and those “hot filed” have some kind of positive effect to sound then there is a possibility of model this behavior. Let take for instance an output transformer of SET amplifiers. We can listen it as is. Then we can mount on the transformer core 20-30W power resistor and to drive current across it to heat up the core to 70C for instance. If the assumption that the magnetic field from hot magnet is different was correct then guess the transformer would change sound. I need to be consulted with transformer people how to conduct this experiment in methodologically kosher way…

Also, I would like to note that if the “hot magnet” theory is correct then no one tell about the absolute improvement as it always an improvement in context of the given design. The softening of hardening of sound relates the design of a given driver not to the absolute improvement. It is possible that “hot magnet” might offer some kind of absolute improvement but so far no one person who ever spoke about electromagnets was able to state it without self-incriminating yourself.  The closer to all come probably Oleg Rullit with some of his commentaries that I read on Russian sites. However, his commentaries were not unproblematic and I do not have opinion yet how serious sound-wise all of his “operation” and his sonic experiences.

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
audiofilofine
Posts 29
Joined on 02-26-2010

Post #: 72
Post ID: 13032
Reply to: 13030
2420 jbl
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
So, I guess you do not measure flux if are getting. You might measure sensitivity and we might presume what when perm magnets has the same sensitivity as electromagnets then the drivers have the same magnetic flux density. Let also presume that when you report that “at 100 volts sounds almost equal” then you have equalized flux and the drivers output. I think you do not see a lot of HF restrain with electromagnet because the JBL 2420 is not so strong HF performer and it rolls off relatively fast, right after 9K-10K. So, you drive your electromagnet with more voltage (in fact with more current) that yields more flux and to “stiffer” sound. Then you wait until the driver warm up and soften sound to the level you like.

Here is in my view is the most interesting thing happen. I am in contrary to haralanov do not deny the proposal of the be’s friend that heat might do magnetic benefit (softening). The key question would be in my view if heat induces mechanical benefit of magnetic benefit. If we were are taking about the drivers like Vitavox with new diaphragms or Goto or any other driver what a metal cone surrounded with softer syntactic suspension then I would undeniably felt that the temperature-susceptive plastic suspension doe warmed and change sound. However, the diaphragm in the small JBL 2420 driver is full metal (correct me if I am wrong) and there is absolutely nothing in that driver that might be soften mechanically. So, there is a very high possibility that a hot magnet radiate some kind of different flux that makes some kind of difference. That is the qestuion that I would like to keep as opened question.

The Cat



I am not a technician and design of these drivers have helped two friends.(one is a popular technical writing in the 80's for an Italian magazine hi fi, the other is not known but has spent many years studying and test driver western electric, jensen, etc..)I think that when the solenoid heats change, do not know how the response of the diaphragm. maybe the hot air through the driver, do not know.could also be the magnetic force acting on the diaphragm in a manner different from that caused dall'alnico.I have no definite answers, but I know for sure that the drivers sound better than before (for me obviously)I made some extent with spectrum analyzer and a microphone recently, but like I said I am not a technician and I do not think the measure has no value.I could have done it the wrong way and then I would not put the screen on the forum with the frequency response.if the two friends help me I'm thinking of turning in field coil tweeters Magnavox-Jensen.entertainment will be provided and maybe something good will come out.Mine is a great passion and feeling to play something done with my hands is the best feeling in the world to me.
02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
be
Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts 86
Joined on 02-12-2007

Post #: 73
Post ID: 13033
Reply to: 13030
..
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy wrote:

"However, the diaphragm in the small JBL 2420 driver is full metal (correct me if I am wrong) and there is absolutely nothing in that driver that might be soften mechanically."

The speach coil former seems to be made of some kind of fiber and capton, the speach coil wires are fixed by glue and the insulation on them must be a polymer.

I think these must be as strongly influenced by temperature as a plastic suspension.

Rgds.
be
02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 74
Post ID: 13034
Reply to: 13033
The liquefying of glue?
fiogf49gjkf0d

 be wrote:
Romy wrote:

"However, the diaphragm in the small JBL 2420 driver is full metal (correct me if I am wrong) and there is absolutely nothing in that driver that might be soften mechanically."

The speach coil former seems to be made of some kind of fiber and capton, the speach coil wires are fixed by glue and the insulation on them must be a polymer.

I think these must be as strongly influenced by temperature as a plastic suspension.

Be,

I thought about it but I do not think that it is the reason. There are two motives:

1)    VC glue is usually epoxy-base and for epoxy 30-40 degree difference is not a difference at all.

2)     If the glue got soften and begin to damp the compliance between the turns of VC and the former then everyone would note that driver would stop to react or became less sensitive to the low level signals. I mean the very minimum currents would be consumed by elasticity of the glue and would not acknowledge by diaphragms. You do not see the field-coil peoples report it. In fact they look like report opposite. I do not have a lot of credibility in their reports as most of what they esteemed sounded very mediocre in my view but I do NOT think that electromagnets do it details.

So, I do not think that the temporary “liquefying of glue” would be the case, but who knows…

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
02-27-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 75
Post ID: 13036
Reply to: 13020
Thank you, Haralanov.
fiogf49gjkf0d

Haralanov,

I spoke with a guy who consulted me during my Electo-Vitavox project. He helped me with selection of core material, deliberated the core and calculated the right coil to keep the core mass optimally magnetized. He has over 40 experiences to deal with all of it, so I pretty trust his expertise. He read your posts and I asked him if what you report has any justification. He was supervised with my question as according to him what you report is very self-evident. He insisted that higher voltage will substantially fasten rise time and will make VC to react much faster. I asked him why his did not tell me about it before and he replied: “You did not ask”.

Well, if so then you, Haralanov, have “discovered” a cool way to cure those always inappropriately soft-sounding to my taste electromagnet drivers. Most of the electromagnets that I have seen were under 20V, I think the first RCA versions used 110V and they switch to 12V… and no one Moron had noticed it. So, the high voltage can inhale some transient live into them – that is cool and it has revised my interest in the electromagnets.

I have ordered an experimental coil for my Vitavox. It will be with anti-corona measures (vacuum impregnated and so on) and I asked the coil to be able to be rated for 400V-450V. I think (home) sometime in the end of summer or during the fall I will have my fully functional playback back and will be able to try it. Thanks, Haralanov for the high-voltage tip, I am VERY surprised that no one spoke about it before. I am not sure about your battery experience – I think experimenting with different type of power supplies and filtering would be more fruitful, but the idea to excite and to energy the field with more voltage I think is very much worth to explore.

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
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