![]() |
|
KEF T15
While we're all praising/damning old KEF drivers, does anyone remember
the T15? Any opinions? It's a large dome tweeter crossed over at 1kHz. -- Eiron. |
KEF T15
"Eiron" wrote in message ... While we're all praising/damning old KEF drivers, does anyone remember the T15? Any opinions? It's a large dome tweeter crossed over at 1kHz. My memory of it was in the transmission line speakers designed by Dr Arthur Bailey of Bradford University and the subject of an article in Wireless World in 1972. A colleague of mine built a pair and he sold them to me when he got married and moved into a smaller house in about 1977. The T15 by then was obsolete and a T27 was used to which I later added a Coles 4001 super tweeter. By today's standards the imaging was not so good but you could rattle windows at ten paces with the clear, solid, and immensely natural deep bass - you have never heard organ pedal reeds like it! Sadly I had to disassemble them about 20 years ago as Management was getting fed up with the size, but I still have the drivers. The nearest commercial equivalent was the TLS80, and in a different case a Cambridge speaker, ISTR the R50. -- Woody harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com |
KEF T15
On 17/12/2015 07:35, Woody wrote:
"Eiron" wrote in message ... While we're all praising/damning old KEF drivers, does anyone remember the T15? Any opinions? It's a large dome tweeter crossed over at 1kHz. My memory of it was in the transmission line speakers designed by Dr Arthur Bailey of Bradford University and the subject of an article in Wireless World in 1972. A colleague of mine built a pair and he sold them to me when he got married and moved into a smaller house in about 1977. The T15 by then was obsolete and a T27 was used to which I later added a Coles 4001 super tweeter. By today's standards the imaging was not so good but you could rattle windows at ten paces with the clear, solid, and immensely natural deep bass - you have never heard organ pedal reeds like it! Sadly I had to disassemble them about 20 years ago as Management was getting fed up with the size, but I still have the drivers. The nearest commercial equivalent was the TLS80, and in a different case a Cambridge speaker, ISTR the R50. All very well but what about the T15? I acquired a pair of KEF Cantata G4s and can't live with them, even in the garage, so they'll be on ebay after Christmas. Unless I decide to give them another chance and re-use them with an active crossover, as they look very nice with the mirrored domes. We've all built transmission lines with Cambridge R50 crossovers. It was a rite of passage.... -- Eiron. |
KEF T15
In article ,
Eiron wrote: All very well but what about the T15? I acquired a pair of KEF Cantata G4s and can't live with them, even in the garage, so they'll be on ebay after Christmas. Unless I decide to give them another chance and re-use them with an active crossover, as they look very nice with the mirrored domes. IMHO, a crossover frequency right slap bang in the middle of the most sensitive part of the hearing is asking for trouble. As is expecting one unit to handle the top 4 or 5 octaves. Or the bottom 4 or 5, come to that. ;-) -- *One tequila, two tequila, three tequila, floor. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
KEF T15
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 14:59:11 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote: In article , Eiron wrote: All very well but what about the T15? I acquired a pair of KEF Cantata G4s and can't live with them, even in the garage, so they'll be on ebay after Christmas. Unless I decide to give them another chance and re-use them with an active crossover, as they look very nice with the mirrored domes. IMHO, a crossover frequency right slap bang in the middle of the most sensitive part of the hearing is asking for trouble. As is expecting one unit to handle the top 4 or 5 octaves. Or the bottom 4 or 5, come to that. ;-) You've just reminded me of poor old Keith. He was a great fan of full-range drivers. d --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
KEF T15
In article ,
Don Pearce wrote: IMHO, a crossover frequency right slap bang in the middle of the most sensitive part of the hearing is asking for trouble. As is expecting one unit to handle the top 4 or 5 octaves. Or the bottom 4 or 5, come to that. ;-) You've just reminded me of poor old Keith. He was a great fan of full-range drivers. Ah - yes. Remember that well. As you get older tweeters get less important. ;-) -- *Why do overlook and oversee mean opposite things? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
KEF T15
Are kent Engineering Foundary still in business?
Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active Remember, if you don't like where I post or what I say, you don't have to read my posts! :-) "Eiron" wrote in message ... While we're all praising/damning old KEF drivers, does anyone remember the T15? Any opinions? It's a large dome tweeter crossed over at 1kHz. -- Eiron. |
KEF T15
On 17/12/2015 15:12, Don Pearce wrote:
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 14:59:11 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Eiron wrote: All very well but what about the T15? I acquired a pair of KEF Cantata G4s and can't live with them, even in the garage, so they'll be on ebay after Christmas. Unless I decide to give them another chance and re-use them with an active crossover, as they look very nice with the mirrored domes. IMHO, a crossover frequency right slap bang in the middle of the most sensitive part of the hearing is asking for trouble. As is expecting one unit to handle the top 4 or 5 octaves. Or the bottom 4 or 5, come to that. ;-) You've just reminded me of poor old Keith. He was a great fan of full-range drivers. I was reminded of him this week when I saw in a second-hand shop a pair of large, nicely home-made, cabinets, each containing a 4" full-range driver with whizzer cone. Remember this Christmas to drink a toast to absent friends. "Valves and vinyl, because I say so." And smoke a Voigt pipe in his memory.... -- Eiron. |
KEF T15
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 17:46:14 +0000, Eiron
wrote: On 17/12/2015 15:12, Don Pearce wrote: On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 14:59:11 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Eiron wrote: All very well but what about the T15? I acquired a pair of KEF Cantata G4s and can't live with them, even in the garage, so they'll be on ebay after Christmas. Unless I decide to give them another chance and re-use them with an active crossover, as they look very nice with the mirrored domes. IMHO, a crossover frequency right slap bang in the middle of the most sensitive part of the hearing is asking for trouble. As is expecting one unit to handle the top 4 or 5 octaves. Or the bottom 4 or 5, come to that. ;-) You've just reminded me of poor old Keith. He was a great fan of full-range drivers. I was reminded of him this week when I saw in a second-hand shop a pair of large, nicely home-made, cabinets, each containing a 4" full-range driver with whizzer cone. Remember this Christmas to drink a toast to absent friends. "Valves and vinyl, because I say so." And smoke a Voigt pipe in his memory.... Towards the end he was obviously pretty frail, and on enough medication to stock a chemist's shop, but he still managed to ride his huge old motorbikes. I think maybe a lot of the time when he was extra-cantakerous, it was the pain talking. d --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
KEF T15
On 17/12/2015 18:30, Don Pearce wrote:
On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 17:46:14 +0000, Eiron wrote: On 17/12/2015 15:12, Don Pearce wrote: On Thu, 17 Dec 2015 14:59:11 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Eiron wrote: All very well but what about the T15? I acquired a pair of KEF Cantata G4s and can't live with them, even in the garage, so they'll be on ebay after Christmas. Unless I decide to give them another chance and re-use them with an active crossover, as they look very nice with the mirrored domes. IMHO, a crossover frequency right slap bang in the middle of the most sensitive part of the hearing is asking for trouble. As is expecting one unit to handle the top 4 or 5 octaves. Or the bottom 4 or 5, come to that. ;-) You've just reminded me of poor old Keith. He was a great fan of full-range drivers. Indeed :-) I didn't entirely get it, despite being propped up in front of his latest and greatest from time to time. He did like to play some quite eclectic music loud, in quite a small room - which didn't suit me especially well. Some of the smaller one driver speakers did sound pretty good - he had a pair tucked behind a computer that had remarkable bass from (IIRC) a single 4" driver. And in fairness, he did have conventional speakers in his hifi room. Always switching between them - almost trying to like something more conventional. And a big pair of Ruarks for the AV setup. I was reminded of him this week when I saw in a second-hand shop a pair of large, nicely home-made, cabinets, each containing a 4" full-range driver with whizzer cone. Remember this Christmas to drink a toast to absent friends. "Valves and vinyl, because I say so." And smoke a Voigt pipe in his memory.... Will do. Remember him fondly. Towards the end he was obviously pretty frail, and on enough medication to stock a chemist's shop, but he still managed to ride his huge old motorbikes. I think maybe a lot of the time when he was extra-cantakerous, it was the pain talking. Aye, I gather it was grim towards the end. But he seemed OK a couple of months before - we had a huge curry dinner and he was on fine form. And, it has to be said, he was never one to suffer fools ;-) -- Cheers, Rob |
All times are GMT. The time now is 10:23 AM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk