In September I was visiting my father in England. He asked me to build a set of speakers for their sun room. A pair of Audax AP170Z0, Aerogel 6.5 inch bass mids and a pair of Scanspeak D 29 tweeters were available.
I built a pair of 1 cu. ft. two way speakers with these drivers. They were astonishingly good performers, with an excellent bass, mid range and HF.
It has come to my attention that Parts Express have these
woofers available at a bargain basement price of just $22.
Audax has just been sold by Harmon International to this outfit, .
They say they will produce a more limited range of speakers. The above drivers are listed as archive drivers. So how long they will be available from Parts Express is open to question.
The Audax line of Aerogel cone drivers has always been well regarded.
This driver at first sight does not look promising, as there is a rise in response above 1 kHz, with a 9db peak from a prominent break up mode at 3.8 kHz. However with notch filter and careful crossover design this driver can be nicely tamed, to build speakers of very superior quality.
I have put together a
family of designs around this woofer to take a bite out of the recession!
I have included my original design using the fairly expensive
Scanspeak tweeter.
I have adapted the design for the highly cost effective
Vifa DTG 05/06, at $22.56 each. So a set two way speakers could be built for less than $90 in driver cost. A two and a half way or MTM set can be built for around $130 in driver cost. This is highly cost effective for speakers that will easily compare with speakers in the 1 to 2 K range per pair, as long as the enclosures are built well with good bracing.
I have also included a crossover for the
SEAS 27 TDC tweeter which represents excellent value for money at just under $40.
On my web page about this driver, you will find highly cost effective designs for a couple of two ways, with crossovers for three tweeters. You will also see the circuit for the lower fill driver if you want to build one of the two two and a half ways. There are also a couple of MTMs and circuits for both the VIFA and SEAS tweeters.
If you have some wood working skills and want a speaker upgrade, this is a relatively inexpensive way of doing it.