Audioholics RBH recommendation confusions, are multiple tweeters/woofere needed?
Dear Audioholics readers,
I am very confused about RBH speakers so if anyway has them, you can advise me as to what I need and recommendations and advice.
First I know RBH had the lse series and has the reference signature series. But am I really losing out if I can only afford or obtain the regular 1266 se?
My plan is this:
(2) 1266 se, (1) 661 se, (4) 66-se (2) 61-se (for presence speakers if I use it with a yamaha or whatever). I am confused as to which ones to use with which, the 66 se dipoles as surround sides or the 61 se with the surround backs.
I don't know if DIPLOES are Better than regular speakers for surround.
Anyways, here's a tough question that I really
ponder to ask. The RBH 1266 IS Rbh's top floorstanding speaker that is full range. Although RBH has the T series, they are usually units moduled together.
Here's the issue and it has to do with Multiple drivers, what is the purpose of multiple drivers such as multiple tweeters. Does it create a wider soundfield or not?
My dillema is that I
really want to use the RBH 1266 outdoors in my backyard occasionally for parties or sound lol. BUT IT ONLY HAS
ONE TWEETER, AND does that
make a difference
Well the RBH in wall speaker is interesting . WHY? . RBH claims that it has the performance of its own T-1 Unit but its only $1500
http://www.rbhsound.com/si6100.shtml
FOR in wall usage. Audioholics recommends it, however, it doesn't have a bass response down to 30hz that is near flat.
It however has 4 woofers and three tweeters, so is it better than then the 1266se for outdoor use?. RBH seems to be making different speakers for different purposes rather than making a line better than one. Its flagship t-30 is probably just the signature lse floorstanding with the woofer of the 1212 se subwoofer or a variant thereof.
In audioholics recommended systems they recommend two 10 inch regular rbh subwoofers even though better subwoofers exists even from RBH. The 1266 has only ONE TWEETER compared to axioms two tweeters on its m80 and onix's two seperate tweeters that play different frequenciesOkay, so who's losing on one tweeter, I know some tweeters are more powerful and louder than others, but then why do some RBH's need more than one for similar priced in wall units. What's the loss/gain. This is all confusing, I hope the audioholics staff can chime in and explain what is best for what. I don't why 1010 10 inch dual RBH speakers would be recommend for their high price and why not the 1212 or maybe svs,hsu,axiom,velodyne,etc.