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Speaker unit to baffle.
In article ,
Trevor Wilson wrote: Second off: NEAR speakers were not widely distributed and only for a relatively short period. The company was purchased by a larger entity whose bean counters looked at the numbers from the hi fi market and promptly shut that side of the business down. In much the same way that many companies have done before them (Apogee, et al). The other, far more obvious reason is that the NEAR 10M is so damned good that no owner wants to sell them. I expect that mine will not leave my side for the foreseeable future. Given a company in the UK like Falcon - pretty small - has gone to the bother of having things like the B110 and so on re-manufactured, and can do complete kits to make your own 3/5a, wonder why they've not bothered to re-manufacture this wonderful (and inexpensive) speaker of yours? If it really is that good, would be a winner. -- *Succeed, in spite of management * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Speaker unit to baffle.
On 12/04/2018 9:29 AM, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Trevor Wilson wrote: Second off: NEAR speakers were not widely distributed and only for a relatively short period. The company was purchased by a larger entity whose bean counters looked at the numbers from the hi fi market and promptly shut that side of the business down. In much the same way that many companies have done before them (Apogee, et al). The other, far more obvious reason is that the NEAR 10M is so damned good that no owner wants to sell them. I expect that mine will not leave my side for the foreseeable future. Given a company in the UK like Falcon - pretty small - has gone to the bother of having things like the B110 and so on re-manufactured, and can do complete kits to make your own 3/5a, wonder why they've not bothered to re-manufacture this wonderful (and inexpensive) speaker of yours? If it really is that good, would be a winner. **The NEAR drivers are unique and are what makes the speakers so brilliant. They are also subject to a number of patents (which may, or may not have run out). The KEF B110 driver, by comparison, is a very simple thing to duplicate. Here's one NEAR patent: https://patents.google.com/patent/US5335287 -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
Speaker unit to baffle.
On 12/04/2018 00:14, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , tony sayer wrote: Apart, rather obviously, with the 3/5a which you describe as junk. Whose designers should be shot. Without being able to give an example of speaker designed at the same time which was better. Don't think many loudspeaker manufacturers had an "on the tap" live radio studio to help develop them;).. Interesting point. I've never worked in radio, and dunno if the designers made use of any of the facilities there. Apart from getting high quality recordings of whatever they wanted, of course. The departments who designed these speakers were both based well away from the studio centres. I don't remember any prototype speakers doing the rounds in TV. But then, to the best of my knowledge, the 3/5a wasn't used at TC for monitoring. More an OB speaker. It may have been in some small edit facilities, but not something I know about. Do have a little story about them at TC, though. TC3 was modernised in the early 70s. Went from an elderly BBC type B desk to a large Neve. And at the same time had an all singing and dancing BBC designed talkback system installed. And instead of the usual poor bandwidth mics and amps etc, was designed to full broadcast quality. Talkback mics were AKG 451, and the talkback speakers in sound control LS3/5a. For all of a couple of weeks. Why? The quality was simply too good. Just as good if not better than speech being broadcast, which could used the same mics. And rather better if personal mics were in use. The 3/5a were changed for single cone RS PA quality speakers. With the typical colouration of a small cheap speaker. Some said we told you so. Waste of money having excellent quality talkback. But degrading it at the last moment at the speaker meant you didn't have the usual noise and distortion etc of a badly designed system. Don't know whether it is true or not but I was told (by Dickie Chamberlain) that the change of speaker was to make it easy to distinguish between talkback and programme material. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
Speaker unit to baffle.
In article ,
Graeme Wall wrote: On 12/04/2018 00:14, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , tony sayer wrote: Apart, rather obviously, with the 3/5a which you describe as junk. Whose designers should be shot. Without being able to give an example of speaker designed at the same time which was better. Don't think many loudspeaker manufacturers had an "on the tap" live radio studio to help develop them;).. Interesting point. I've never worked in radio, and dunno if the designers made use of any of the facilities there. Apart from getting high quality recordings of whatever they wanted, of course. The departments who designed these speakers were both based well away from the studio centres. I don't remember any prototype speakers doing the rounds in TV. But then, to the best of my knowledge, the 3/5a wasn't used at TC for monitoring. More an OB speaker. It may have been in some small edit facilities, but not something I know about. Do have a little story about them at TC, though. TC3 was modernised in the early 70s. Went from an elderly BBC type B desk to a large Neve. And at the same time had an all singing and dancing BBC designed talkback system installed. And instead of the usual poor bandwidth mics and amps etc, was designed to full broadcast quality. Talkback mics were AKG 451, and the talkback speakers in sound control LS3/5a. For all of a couple of weeks. Why? The quality was simply too good. Just as good if not better than speech being broadcast, which could used the same mics. And rather better if personal mics were in use. The 3/5a were changed for single cone RS PA quality speakers. With the typical colouration of a small cheap speaker. Some said we told you so. Waste of money having excellent quality talkback. But degrading it at the last moment at the speaker meant you didn't have the usual noise and distortion etc of a badly designed system. Don't know whether it is true or not but I was told (by Dickie Chamberlain) that the change of speaker was to make it easy to distinguish between talkback and programme material. Exactly so. Perhaps I didn't explain it well. You'd normally expect speech coming from the prog speaker to be the highest quality and talkback obvious by being less so. When TC3 was initially refurbished, the monitoring speakers were BBC LS 5/1, and the 3/5a reproduced the human voice (at realistic levels) rather better than it. The ubiquitous LS 5/8 was still some way off. Richard was a superb sound mixer. The way he copied the commercial sound of a pop record in the early 'live' days of TOTP with virtually no time to rehearse was truly magical. Do you remember his supercharged Morris Minor? ;-) -- *Can fat people go skinny-dipping? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Speaker unit to baffle.
In article ,
Bob Latham wrote: In article , Dave Plowman (News) wrote: Given a company in the UK like Falcon - pretty small - has gone to the bother of having things like the B110 and so on re-manufactured, and can do complete kits to make your own 3/5a, wonder why they've not bothered to re-manufacture this wonderful (and inexpensive) speaker of yours? If it really is that good, would be a winner. To be fair you have to consider that the B110 has been used in countless designs over the year, far from just the LS3/5A. I could probably name at least a dozen off the top of my head. Also, I'm pretty sure that at least one of the people involved in Falcon was ex KEF. All true. But given Mr Wilson's insistence on how wonderful the NEAR was, it smacks of some form of conspiracy to suppress it. -- *The most common name in the world is Mohammed * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Speaker unit to baffle.
In article ,
Trevor Wilson wrote: Given a company in the UK like Falcon - pretty small - has gone to the bother of having things like the B110 and so on re-manufactured, and can do complete kits to make your own 3/5a, wonder why they've not bothered to re-manufacture this wonderful (and inexpensive) speaker of yours? If it really is that good, would be a winner. **The NEAR drivers are unique and are what makes the speakers so brilliant. They are also subject to a number of patents (which may, or may not have run out). The KEF B110 driver, by comparison, is a very simple thing to duplicate. Here's one NEAR patent: So what? Unless you are trying to say something made 30 years ago can't be reproduced today? Do they use unobtainium? A patent for something no longer of commercial value is worthless too, BTW. -- *The statement above is false Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Speaker unit to baffle.
On 12/04/2018 11:05, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Graeme Wall wrote: On 12/04/2018 00:14, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , tony sayer wrote: Apart, rather obviously, with the 3/5a which you describe as junk. Whose designers should be shot. Without being able to give an example of speaker designed at the same time which was better. Don't think many loudspeaker manufacturers had an "on the tap" live radio studio to help develop them;).. Interesting point. I've never worked in radio, and dunno if the designers made use of any of the facilities there. Apart from getting high quality recordings of whatever they wanted, of course. The departments who designed these speakers were both based well away from the studio centres. I don't remember any prototype speakers doing the rounds in TV. But then, to the best of my knowledge, the 3/5a wasn't used at TC for monitoring. More an OB speaker. It may have been in some small edit facilities, but not something I know about. Do have a little story about them at TC, though. TC3 was modernised in the early 70s. Went from an elderly BBC type B desk to a large Neve. And at the same time had an all singing and dancing BBC designed talkback system installed. And instead of the usual poor bandwidth mics and amps etc, was designed to full broadcast quality. Talkback mics were AKG 451, and the talkback speakers in sound control LS3/5a. For all of a couple of weeks. Why? The quality was simply too good. Just as good if not better than speech being broadcast, which could used the same mics. And rather better if personal mics were in use. The 3/5a were changed for single cone RS PA quality speakers. With the typical colouration of a small cheap speaker. Some said we told you so. Waste of money having excellent quality talkback. But degrading it at the last moment at the speaker meant you didn't have the usual noise and distortion etc of a badly designed system. Don't know whether it is true or not but I was told (by Dickie Chamberlain) that the change of speaker was to make it easy to distinguish between talkback and programme material. Exactly so. Perhaps I didn't explain it well. You'd normally expect speech coming from the prog speaker to be the highest quality and talkback obvious by being less so. When TC3 was initially refurbished, the monitoring speakers were BBC LS 5/1, and the 3/5a reproduced the human voice (at realistic levels) rather better than it. The ubiquitous LS 5/8 was still some way off. Richard was a superb sound mixer. The way he copied the commercial sound of a pop record in the early 'live' days of TOTP with virtually no time to rehearse was truly magical. Do you remember his supercharged Morris Minor? ;-) Oh yes! I have my own story about Dickie. I used to belong to an amateur drama club and they were doing a play called Night Must Fall. The director wanted to set it in the last year of the death penalty in UK (relevant to the plot). There's a Paul Robson song in it that she wanted to sound like the early 60s but there was no commercial version available so Bill Whiston and I rejigged it for electric guitars and drums. Bill asked Dickie if we could borrow the TMS after a TOTP session and he agreed. We turned up with our kit, just the two of us, and Dickie said we'd need a hand on the faders so he stayed on and balanced it for us! -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
Speaker unit to baffle.
In article , Iain
scribeth thus maanantai 9. huhtikuuta 2018 13.03.12 UTC+3 Bill Taylor kirjoitti: I don't think you'll find many professionals using the LS3/5A. Even in the BBC they were only used in certain specific circumstances and even the BBC started using commercial powered speakers for the job that they used to do many years ago. One might infer from what Dave wrote that the LS3/5a was ubiquitous at the BBC. It seems that this was by no means the case. In an off-list message regarding this thread, a chap who was recording music at the TV Centre from the day it opened until he retired, tells me that that they had a variety of speakers. The LS3/5a was not used. He also mentioned that this speaker was produced under licence from the BBC by three manufacturers, and that one could differentiate between the same speaker from different makers. Iain They would not have used the 5A's for recording music in a studio the 5/8 was more the one for that. 5A was for OB vans and the like thats what it was designed for!. -- Tony Sayer |
Speaker unit to baffle.
Please sir Trevor if that was the case why aren't they going on fleabay
for a decent wedge like the old despised 5A's?.. **First off: I am an Australian and, thankfully, we have dispensed with Royal honours. Yess i had noticed;) Second off: NEAR speakers were not widely distributed and only for a relatively short period. The company was purchased by a larger entity whose bean counters looked at the numbers from the hi fi market and promptly shut that side of the business down. In much the same way that many companies have done before them (Apogee, et al). The other, far more obvious reason is that the NEAR 10M is so damned good that no owner wants to sell them. I expect that mine will not leave my side for the foreseeable future. Well pity then that so very few were made.. [ASIDE] For one of my clients, I took a pair of NEAR 10M speakers and removed the bits from the enclosure. I then commissioned a pair of cast sand/resin enclosures, which, empty weighed in at around 22kg! I then reassembled the boxes and installed the speakers into his listening room. He still runs them, after more than 20 years. The client is in shipping and has more money than God (if such a creature were to exist, of course) and has the choice of any speaker. I can't find any anywhere unless you can direct me?. **Since they haven't been manufactured for some years, they will be hard to locate. Well none in the UK it seems.. -- Tony Sayer |
Speaker unit to baffle.
tiistai 10. huhtikuuta 2018 17.06.49 UTC+3 Jim Lesurf kirjoitti:
By a quirk of economic history the UK now tends to mean many people live and listen in small rooms at home that lack the acoustic we might desire for better bigger speakers. In the 1840's when the population of Gt Britain was 25 million, the Duke of Wellington, whose address at the time was No.1 London, remarked that "our country is somewhat overcrowded, and the traffic in London intolerable" I wonder what he would think today:-) ? Iain |
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