Tomorrow

Tomorrow

Audioholic Ninja
jsalk said:
I ran across this thread last evening and found it quite interesting. I have never posted on this site before.
- Jim
Jim,

Welcome to Audioholics! As JGarcia said, it's good to have manufacturers represented here. Although...I have to say that looking at your speakers, I can't conjure up the term "manufacturer" with any fervor. "Artist" would be more like it! :)

I wish I could have afforded your personal set that you sold on audiogon a while back. As I stated in an earlier post, your speakers are most beeeeea-u-tiful.

Other than buying a set, is there any place someone in the northwest can audition a pair? I'd sure like to hear 'em.

Much good cheer.
 
jsalk

jsalk

Enthusiast
j_garcia said:
Welcome :D I noticed you offer the GR A/V-1s and the Criterion, but not the Diluceo. Why is that? It is good to see the manufacturers taking part in various forums.
Well, I don't like to offer designs that I have never had personal experience with. I built the Criterions before we developed the Veracity HT1's. Once we started working with the combination of Seas Excel W18's and G2's, there didn't seem to be any point in building the Diluceo for me personally. But, of course, if one of our customers wants this design built, we would be happy to do so. We have always maintained a great relationship with Danny at GR Research and often build his designs.

- Jim
 
jsalk

jsalk

Enthusiast
rjbudz said:
Jim,

Welcome to Audioholics! As JGarcia said, it's good to have manufacturers represented here. Although...I have to say that looking at your speakers, I can't conjure up the term "manufacturer" with any fervor. "Artist" would be more like it! :)

I wish I could have afforded your personal set that you sold on audiogon a while back. As I stated in an earlier post, your speakers are most beeeeea-u-tiful.

Other than buying a set, is there any place someone in the northwest can audition a pair? I'd sure like to hear 'em.

Much good cheer.
Thanks. Glad to be here.

There is a woman in Portland who has both HT3's and HT1's. I don't know how well she has them set up but she has been most cooperative in allowing people to visit her home to hear them. If you would like, you can email me and I can talk to her about a potential listening session.

- Jim
 
Tomorrow

Tomorrow

Audioholic Ninja
jsalk said:
Thanks. Glad to be here.

There is a woman in Portland who has both HT3's and HT1's. I don't know how well she has them set up but she has been most cooperative in allowing people to visit her home to hear them. If you would like, you can email me and I can talk to her about a potential listening session.

- Jim
Thanks, Jim. PM has been sent.
 
jsalk

jsalk

Enthusiast
New HT3's

I don't know if this is kosher or not (please let me know if it is not), but here are some pictures of a pair of HT3's we just finished today for a guy in SanDiego.



And a close-up of the front baffle:



- Jim
 
Tomorrow

Tomorrow

Audioholic Ninja
jsalk said:
I don't know if this is kosher or not (please let me know if it is not), but here are some pictures of a pair of HT3's we just finished today for a guy in SanDiego.



And a close-up of the front baffle:



- Jim
I think I'm in love.........:eek:
 
A

AdrianMills

Full Audioholic
Hi Jim,

:) I'll echo what others have said and say that it's always good to have manufacturers participating in forums like this. Also, I hope you didn't take offence at my posts - if you followed the ensuing little debate I think anyone should realize that my intention was not to insult.

jsalk said:
I don't know if this is kosher or not (please let me know if it is not), but here are some pictures of a pair of HT3's we just finished today for a guy in SanDiego.

And a close-up of the front baffle:

- Jim
The workmanship on those seems to be excellent.

Looks really are subjective though. Sorry, but I think they are just too gaudy and the lines just don't fit very well with me.

Just out of curiosity, if someone like me came along with a rough sketch of a cabinet design would you take that design, makes some plans and build it and would the cost be similar to your standard designs, assuming equivalent woods, drivers, size, complexity, etc?
 
A

AdrianMills

Full Audioholic
jsalk said:
Well, there is a difference in the way tubes and solid state behave when they reach clipping. With tubes, the gain simply doesn't increase as the input gain rises. This results in what many have called "soft" clipping. Solid state, on the other hand, can be very harsh when driven to clipping.

Neither situation is ideal, but tubes handle clipping in a much more favorable fashion. For this reason, you can get away with fewer watts using tubes.

I often demo my HT3's with a 40-watt tube amp and have never had any complaints. I wouldn't try it with a 40-watt solid state amp. I would want at least double the wattage with solid state.
At least I now know the logic behind that now. I currently do not know enough about amp design to comment on your description of the clipping behavior though but even if it is correct I'm not sure how useful it is really.

Surely sensitivity together with nominal and min impedance are better specs to match amps as ideally you're aiming never to clip at all (as I assume you implied) and if you are clipping you should buy a more powerful amp and/or turn the volume down and/or buy more sensitive/easier to drive speakers.

jsalk said:
Another question concerned HT3 specifications. In the fourth paragraph on our HT3 product page, there is a link call "specifications/cost." You will find some information there.
- Jim
Yes, and for the HT2 but the specs for your other products aren't so easy to find. Sorry, specs aren't everything I know but it's the first thing I look for and when I have to hunt around a page for them it gets tedious. Maybe a clear link at the top or bottom of the page or even including the spec table directly in the page would fend off pedantic critics like myself? ;)

One thing; the HT3 spec says Impedance (Average/Min): 8ohm.
Surely it's not as flat as that? Or did you just forget to put in the min impedance?
 
jsalk

jsalk

Enthusiast
Adrian -

I hope you didn't take offence at my posts - if you followed the ensuing little debate I think anyone should realize that my intention was not to insult.
No offense taken. Your scepticism is probably wise. There are a few individuals selling speaker designs on the internet that I would not personally build. For the uninitiated, it may be difficult to separate good designs from bad. And teh situation is even more complicated in that some people writing reviews on the net are not all that qualified.

So I am used to dealing with a degree of scepticism from individuals who have not dealt with us before. But I do notice that as time goes on, more and more people are realizing that we are producing truly world-class speakers.

Our HT3's, for example, are most often compared to Joseph Audio Pearls which cost $20,000 per pair and also use Seas drivers. In fact, many who have heard both designs feel the HT3's are superior in that the top end is more transparent and bass more extended. Over the past 2 years the HT3's have replaced many speakers from very well-respected manufacturers in the $10,000 - $20,000 price range.

Just out of curiosity, if someone like me came along with a rough sketch of a cabinet design would you take that design, makes some plans and build it and would the cost be similar to your standard designs, assuming equivalent woods, drivers, size, complexity, etc?
Yes, provided it would not compromise the performance of the design. But in that case, I would discuss it with you (or someone like you) to make sure the constraints are understood and that the resulting cabinet design would perform as it should (internal volume and front baffle width are appropriate for the drivers and design, etc.).

For example, here are some subs I built for a gentleman who wanted 12" subs to use as stands for his Vercaity HT1's. He sent me the drawings, we adjusted the internal volume and went to work.



Here are some HT2's I was requested to do at a maximum of 38" (normally 40" tall) and a tilt of 3 degrees for use under a home theater screen (he actually purchased three although only two of them are shown here):



In this case, an MTM using Seas drivers was not a design we offered at the time. But that is what the customer wanted so we designed the HT2's and added them to our product offerings.

In short, we are a custom builder and work with clients to try and deliver exactly what they want provided we are certain that the results will meet our standards.

I might point out here that I owned a recording studio in the early '70's and spent the next 30 years working in studios around the country. So I am used to working with very high performance speakers systems costing up to $75,000 per pair or more. So I tend to analyze speaker performance from this reference point. I have turned down more than a few speaker projects because I felt the results would probably not be something I would want to be associated with.

Surely sensitivity together with nominal and min impedance are better specs to match amps as ideally you're aiming never to clip at all (as I assume you implied) and if you are clipping you should buy a more powerful amp and/or turn the volume down and/or buy more sensitive/easier to drive speakers.
I agree. Keep in mind that most of the time you are probably listening at 5 - 8 watts and the rest is for headroom. I tend to listen to my HT3's at moderate volume levels (which my wife rgards as too high) and my 40-watt tube amp performs just fine. But I would certainly regard it as a minimum. If someone asked for my recommendations on a tube amp, I would probably suggest something more like 60-watts just to be safe.

As for sensitivity, I might point out that speaker design is all about trade-offs. Our Veracity line, for example, was designed to be extremely accurate, highly detailed and very low in terms of distortion. We certainly could have used drivers with higher sensitivity. But there are currently no higher sensitivity drivers available that are as detailed and accurate as the Seas Excel drivers. So, in order to gain sensitivity, you would have to either use multiple drivers of the same type (which introduces other trade-offs including, but not limited to, higher cost), or you would have to live with less detail and higher distortion levels. There is no free lunch.
Maybe a clear link at the top or bottom of the page or even including the spec table directly in the page would fend off pedantic critics like myself?
Good point. Perhaps when I get some free time to work on the site, I can make some changes in this regard. There are quite a few things I would like to do to improve the site, but my time is somewhat limited as I have a lot of speakers to build.

One thing; the HT3 spec says Impedance (Average/Min): 8ohm.
Surely it's not as flat as that? Or did you just forget to put in the min impedance?
Good catch! I missed that. The minimum is 6.8 ohms.

- Jim
 
A

AdrianMills

Full Audioholic
Jim,

interesting reply, thanks.

And that minimum of 6.8 is surprising; I'm not really sure why but I was expecting B&W-like numbers where they state 3ohm minimums for some of their 800 line.
 
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