
slipperybidness
Audioholic Warlord
Flush mounted: does not hang over or protrude from the surface. Not change in outer thickness. Countersunk.
The crossover was designed using the Fountek NeoCD 3.0 with a round face plate, 110 mm in diameter. If you use any other ribbon tweeter, a new crossover must be designed. This requires measurements of the new tweeter installed in an ER18 MTM cabinet.Sorry for that. As You guessed I mean- change the faceplate in neo cd 3.0 from round one into a shape of rectangular or square/ like it is in NeoCD2.0 or NeoX 1.0.
Moving the tweeter to the middle probably will not make a major difference in sound.I want to keep all dimensions ( and flat front of loudspeaker/ not like it is in 882/880- tweeter deeper than woofers), but I would like to move the tweeter in the middle in one vertical line.
I heard that there is some program that can calculate what changes should be made in original crossover, so maybe it will be possible without loss of quality in sound.
A "flush mounted" face plate is sunk into the front of the speaker cabinet so its edge is smooth with the front of the cabinet, similar to this picture:Ps. Sorry for my englishwhat do You mean saying "flush mounted"?
Here's my progress on the ER-18s. it has been a slow process. Two kids (2,5 and 10mos) and the younger one has been in the hospital a bit. Doing better now![]()
My shop is usually messy this is a new low. Embarrassed to make it public.
My wife is sick so i was home to look after the stinkers today. Stole away a few minutes whilst they were locked in a closet. Just glued the baffle and base on the second speaker. Need to attach the binding posts, add the stuffing and mount the drivers. I have some floor spikes coming (back ordered until 6/15 or so). Might be listening to new speakers soon. Hopefully the xover is correct!! If anyone can make heads of tails let me know.
Soon....very soon...now for a new preamp-
Jeff
Hi, great build! I'mHey guys,
Sorry for the lag to get an update posted.
I've been listening to the speakers for about 1 month now.
System:
-ER-18s
-Squeezebox 2 with modded PS
-MHDT Paradesia Plus NOS with WE 396
-YS audio Symphonies plus preamp with JJ tesla tubes
-ClassD audio SDS 254 amp (250 x2 into 4 ohms)
-cables-cheap Kimber and Cardas
I built the ribbon version.
The room is about 20 x 25. Not treated and too live. Bass is particuarly ragged lots of EQ on the IB sub). There is a HT bulkhead between the speakers (hindsight....). The ER-18s are about 1' in front of the font plane of the cabinet. My HT rig has an IB sub but this is not used for music.
Me- old (49 yo). Too many years playing music standing next to a ride cymbal (usually with cigarette buts in my ears). Prefers acoustic music (jazz, folk, etc), rock or classical. Played saxophone for many years in my youth. Well aquainted with what instruments and live music sounds like.
I feel like the strengths of the ER-18 are:
Neutrality- These are very accurate speakers in my estimation. Not bright. Not boomy.
Imaging- These things throw a great soundstage and instruments have are layered fron to back and extend wel past the speaker width. I love this about the speakers. To me, this is their best strength.
Vocals sound great. Natural and neutral and well integrated into the soundstage. Horns sound like they should. Brass has the appropriate bite. Mine are truly a little hot, but I know that is my room. I can hear lots of detail that was not evident before. There appear to be very revealing without being strident to my ears.
High WAF. They look nicer than others I was considering.
Other stuff-
Bass response- Not knocking down the doors, but adequate. The speakers play plenty low for acoustic music. To my estimation, at least 40 hz. They are not rattling the walls or moving copious amount of air. Bass is tuneful and tight. My room is pretty large (500 sq ft with 9 foot ceilings) but bass is certainly adequate for me. I'm sure a 3 way with a 10" or 12" woofer would fill things out better but that is not a fair fight. BTW, my port was 1/4" smaller than recommended and i cut is slightly shorter so my guys are not built strictly to spec. i like the bass but it is only a relative strength (for 7" MTMs) and not an absolute strength. Nice bass. no slam.
Overall, I really like these speakers. They best my Modulas (these are not optimally setup), they are better than the Zaph budget ($200) MTM. Should not be a surprise. I heard some $10,000 Thiels with NAD electronics (in a different room) that sounded crazy clean, although a bit sterile. I thought the Theils were significantly better (duh). Sorry for not having a more appropriate comparison.
I would build them again. My electronics and room feel like they are limiting the speakers at this point.
JG
Quick question...![]()
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Crossover Designs (by Dennis Murphy)
Dennis Murphy designed two versions of this speaker, allowing a choice between two different tweeters. Both designs have two ER18 woofers and the same cabinet, but one uses a dome tweeter and the other a ribbon tweeter. For each tweeter there is a different crossover designed specifically for it.
Note that the woofers and cabinet are identical for each design, but the woofer crossover sections of each design are also different. Schematic diagrams and parts lists for both designs are included below. The crossovers assume these details:
• Two SEAS ER18RNX woofers per cabinet, and one tweeter per cabinet:
Dayton RS28F-4 silk dome tweeter (total parts cost $551 as of August 2010)
Fountek NeoCD3-v2 ribbon tweeter (total parts cost $630)
• Follow all details of crossover schematic diagram. It is OK if the crossover components you purchase vary by ±10% from the specified values in the diagram.
• Use the driver locations on front baffle as described above in the cabinet details. Make sure the front baffle outside width is 9". All drivers are meant to be flush-mounted.
Some of the parts on the list, such as binding posts and cabinet spiked feet are my own personal choices. Feel free to change those if you wish, as they will have no direct effect on speaker performance. I priced the various parts (as of August 2010) with info from:
Parts Express (PE) Parts Express: the #1 source for audio, video & speaker building components
Madisound (Mad) Madisound Speaker Components: distributor of loudspeaker drivers and parts for speaker builders..
If you can get any of these parts at a better price from other vendors, feel free to do so.
ER18 MTM with Fountek NeoCd3.0 Ribbon Tweeter
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Note:
• A 0.06 mH inductor was not available. I unwound wire from a 0.1 mH inductor until it measured 0.06 mH. In my hands, unwinding XX coils of wire was enough. I cut off the excess wire and sanded off the clear enamel insulation from the new end.
• I could not find a 50 Ω resistor. I used two 25 Ω resistors wired in series with each other.
ER18 MTM with Dayton RS28F-4 1" Dome Tweeter
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• 24.7 µF capacitor – 20 µF and 4.7 µF capacitors, wired in parallel with each other, behave the same as one capacitor with a value of 24.7 µF. A single 25 µF capacitor can be substituted. Dennis said 24.7 µF looked slightly better in his computer simulation, but he doubts if 25 µF will be audibly different that 24.7 µF.
• The 0.5 Ω resistor in the tweeter circuit is real. I tried, without success, to find a smaller gauge 0.15 mH inductor coil whose extra DC resistance could allow me to eliminate the 0.5 Ω resistor.
If you look at the diagram, it shows the drivers wired in parallel, not in series. The resistance adds differently.Anyone answer my question above?
Right. Two 8 ohm woofers wired in parallel, as they are in this design, will result in a 4 ohm impedance.If you look at the diagram, it shows the drivers wired in parallel, not in series. The resistance adds differently.
Swerd, so when you're designing a speaker like this, do you look at the tuning frequency first or the predicted impedance? Or is it something you sort of do at the same time?Right. Two 8 ohm woofers wired in parallel, as they are in this design, will result in a 4 ohm impedance.
The predicted woofer impedance when mounted in the cabinet is shown in the solid red line in the graph below. It is easy to see that this speaker’s impedance goes no lower than 4 ohms. The tuning frequency of the cabinet, about 37 or 38 Hz, is indicated by the trough between the two red peaks.
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Paul Kittinger designed the ER18 MTM cabinets using Martin King’s software. He is much more familiar with this software than I am, but I’ll try a general answer. To my knowledge, the overall impedance and cabinet tuning frequency were not primary design goals. But that kind of predicted info becomes available whenever you design a cabinet.Swerd, so when you're designing a speaker like this, do you look at the tuning frequency first or the predicted impedance? Or is it something you sort of do at the same time?
I think you may have a problem.Hi there. After reading whole article I was thinking about building them like originals but I have a doubt. I have not needed fountek JP3 and I was thinking to use them instead of NeoCD3. In specification on fountek website recommendet crossover for bouth of them is 2500 Hz Fountek NeoCD30 Fountek JP3.0 .Do You think is there is going to be no problem if I will apply them instead of NeoCDs without making any changes in crossover?
I have to agree with TLS Guy about this. It may not work, and at worst, you could damage the tweeter.Hi there. After reading whole article I was thinking about building them like originals but I have a doubt. I have not needed fountek JP3 and I was thinking to use them instead of NeoCD3. In specification on fountek website recommendet crossover for bouth of them is 2500 Hz Fountek NeoCD30 Fountek JP3.0 .Do You think is there is going to be no problem if I will apply them instead of NeoCDs without making any changes in crossover?
This is a fine place to ask.Sorry to post in such an old thread here, but I want to say thanks for pioneering the way with this "new" ER18 speaker design. Although not completed, I just got mine set up in the living room last week. (I know it's not such a new design anymore; As usual, I am several laps behind--I still have a set of Statement speakers halfway done in my cousin's workshop!)
I have a question about the flat response mentioned above; with my current setup (speakers plugged into an old Harmon Kardon AVR20ii integrated receiver, Nexus7 plugged into receiver) I am experiencing mostly awesome sound throughout the range except for an extra "boominess" or resonance in some of the lower frequencies... e.g. bass drum hits sound artificially loud and ringy on some tracks. Has anybody experienced this with the ER18s? (Somebody tell me if there is a more appropriate place to post a question like this, and others I have on placement for the ER18s and components for an appropriate 2.0 music system. I don't have enough posts to start my own thread yet.)
FYI: I built the dome tweeter version. Also, I am a long-time musician and music lover, but a novice at higher-end audio. Thanks for helping to spread the addiction!
Like fuzz, I have several questions:Although not completed, I just got mine set up in the living room last week.
I have a question about the flat response mentioned above; with my current setup (speakers plugged into an old Harmon Kardon AVR20ii integrated receiver, Nexus7 plugged into receiver) I am experiencing mostly awesome sound throughout the range except for an extra "boominess" or resonance in some of the lower frequencies... e.g. bass drum hits sound artificially loud and ringy on some tracks. Has anybody experienced this with the ER18s?
Every builder makes mistakes. And they can always point them out to anyone. Remember that most or all of these mistakes will never be noticed by anyone other than yourself.… but starting with a simpler and less expensive build would have been a positive and valuable experience. I had my heart set on these coming out 'perfect' for the living room, so each little mistake has been kind of stressful.