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Author Topic: Amazing new Sub-Subwoofer
Mark Gulbrandsen
Resident Trollmaster

Posts: 16657
From: Music City
Registered: Jun 99


 - posted 10-03-2005 09:14 PM      Profile for Mark Gulbrandsen   Email Mark Gulbrandsen   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Many of you may laugh at this idea but it really works. Upscale this thing to a larger unit and it would be amazing in cinemas! It would also blow the dust back out of the screen keeping the perfs open at all times [thumbsup] .

 -

Here is a description of how it works.... now who woulda thought of this?????

"This Eminent Technology unit that produces 110 dB at 10 Hz. It is designed to supplement subwoofers (!!!) in the 5 Hz to 20 Hz range. A 1/3 horse power motor turns the fan blades, which are connected to a rod in the center of a woofer voice coil. Instead of the voice coil moving a cone, it moves the rod, which then moves smaller rods that adjust the pitch of the fan blades. So, the high velocity air coming from the fan is pulsed at the low frequencies. It only takes about 100 watts of amplifier power to drive it. The entire room shook, and the door was opening and closing in time with the signal. All this, and there was almost no distortion (the ET rep had the response being plotted on a spectrum analyzer during the demonstration). They calculated that it would take ten 18" subwoofers to produce this level of sound. It has to be placed in a separate room due to the fan noise, and putting it in the attic would work fine. The opening into your home theater would be about 2'x4' in the ceiling. These are prototypes at this point."

Here is a link to the manufacturers web site.....

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David Stambaugh
Film God

Posts: 4021
From: Eugene, Oregon
Registered: Jan 2002


 - posted 10-03-2005 11:16 PM      Profile for David Stambaugh   Author's Homepage   Email David Stambaugh   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Whoa! Andy Summers will go bonkers over that! [Wink]

Can any current cinema-grade digital audio system (SR-D, DTS, SDDS) actually reproduce frequencies in the range of 5-20Hz?

(When I was into high-end audio, I had an Eminent Technology air-bearing tonearm on my VPI turntable. What a beautiful piece of engineering that tonearm was! The aquarium airhose snaking through the room to the isolated Silent Giant pump was an inconvenience, but hey, whatever it takes to extract every nuance out of those vinyl discs! [Big Grin] )

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Mark Gulbrandsen
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Posts: 16657
From: Music City
Registered: Jun 99


 - posted 10-03-2005 11:24 PM      Profile for Mark Gulbrandsen   Email Mark Gulbrandsen   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
I could certainly envision a 15 foot diameter "Cinema Version" of that thing [uhoh] . Another round of Sensurround movies please... anything to get people back to the cinema!

Mark

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Paul Mayer
Oh get out of it Melvin, before it pulls you under!

Posts: 3836
From: Albuquerque, NM
Registered: Feb 2000


 - posted 10-03-2005 11:40 PM      Profile for Paul Mayer   Author's Homepage   Email Paul Mayer   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
I'll take two! [Big Grin]

I too am a happy owner of an Eminent Technology ET-II air bearing tonearm. Still have it mounted on the Sonograph. Dynavector 17DS, Shure V15MR, and Promethean Green cartridges. Sadly none of that stuff has been used in years, yet I can't bring myself to sell or dump it.

One can never have too much low end response. [beer]

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Frank Angel
Film God

Posts: 5305
From: Brooklyn NY USA
Registered: Dec 1999


 - posted 10-04-2005 04:20 AM      Profile for Frank Angel   Author's Homepage   Email Frank Angel   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Three problems: 1)isolating the fan noise from the audio. If you can hear the audio, no matter if it is coming out of a hole in the wall with the unit placed in another room, how is it that you don't hear the fan noise?

2)Although there may very well be audio components below 20hz that are picked up by microphones (I contend that is mostly unwanted sound, like physical vibrations in the floor as well as air movement, etc -- stuff you DON'T want to hear), no one hears these rumbling sounds when listening to conventional playback systems, most importantly, not the sound mixing engineers in the mixing studio. So by adding a really significant amount of that ultra low frequency information to the playback -- information that the mixing engineer never heard when he was mixing the soundtrack -- you are throwing off the balance of the original mix, in my estimation, probably quite significantly.

Additionally, this ultra subwoofer won't be able to distinguish between the movement of the musicians feet or structural vibrations of the building itself or the air turbulance in the recording studio and the music that is recorded. It won't just enhance ONLY the explosion, it will add lots of unwanted low-end noise along with it.

3) I would also be concerned about the effect of the ultra low frequency on upper frequencies. One of the problems with Sensurround was that the low frequencies would beat against the upper frequencies, especially in the voice range. Dialogue would sound like you were hearing voices through....oh, how conincidental....a fan. The low frequencies would cause a kind of mini-dopler effect on the higher frequences as it changed the density of the air that those frequencies had to traverce to get to the listener. Speak in front of a fan an you can hear that fluttering sound that the voice takes on.

Maybe ten or fifteen years ago I recall seeing a subwoofer that was designed using a motor in conjunction with a driver, but I don't remember who manufactured it or what exactly was the design, other than its advantage was it could produce a very big sound from a small enclosure. There was no fan.

Air cushioned tone arms....phooy! You want to talk about esoteric tonearms and turntables? -- how bout a player where NOTHING touches the LP -- nothing mechanical at all!  - . This baby uses a laser to read the audio in the grooves! Nothing touches the record except light. Check it out here: ELP Laser Turntable They are basically hand made in Japan as you order them and they cost about as much as a new Toyota Corolla, but damn they are sweet. I got their demo CD and the sound they are able to get from worn and even scratched LPs is amazing. Because the laser focuses at the lower portion of the groove, below where the needle usually rides, it misses all that inner groove distortion that was cause by mechanical needle wear at the top of the groove.

Now if I can only convince the lady to let me buy a $15,000 toy....

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Mark Gulbrandsen
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Posts: 16657
From: Music City
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 - posted 10-04-2005 08:27 AM      Profile for Mark Gulbrandsen   Email Mark Gulbrandsen   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
quote: Paul Mayer
I too am a happy owner of an Eminent Technology ET-II air bearing tonearm. Still have it mounted on the Sonograph. Dynavector 17DS, Shure V15MR, and Promethean Green cartridges. Sadly none of that stuff has been used in years, yet I can't bring myself to sell or dump it.
Paul,

Next time I'm in Vegas, or St. George I'd like to get together and purchase that TT of yours so it doesn't end up in the dump!! One of my bad mistakes was selling my VPI and ET arm. The ET arm is one of the few arms of its type that really works.....

quote: Frank Angel
Three problems: 1)isolating the fan noise from the audio. If you can hear the audio, no matter if it is coming out of a hole in the wall with the unit placed in another room, how is it that you don't hear the fan noise?

Apparently the fan turns at a slower rate so air flow is not a problem to mask..... check out movie of how it works on their site. The whole idea is to generate subsonics... something thats never been easy to do. I don't recall any dialog problems with Sensurround in the theatres in Chicago that I heard it in.... just plaster comming down!!

The laser TT has many problems including a really bad manufacturer with a history of bad customer service and poor delivery. There is also a huge problem with it picking up dust on records played back. You have to clean amy record played back in the thing on a special 2,000.00 record cleaner. Smart was the forst US distributer but Norm gane up on the company.

Mark

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Louis Bornwasser
Film God

Posts: 4441
From: prospect ky usa
Registered: Mar 2005


 - posted 10-04-2005 09:34 AM      Profile for Louis Bornwasser   Author's Homepage   Email Louis Bornwasser   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
While we can argue that there may or may not be anything worthwhile at extreme L.F.; there is no difficulty recording it. Optical will reproduce "changes in atmospheric pressure" (Tom Holman). Digital should have no problem with 1 hz up until it converts to analog. Anything magnetic will have a difficulty. Louis

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Frank Angel
Film God

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From: Brooklyn NY USA
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 - posted 10-04-2005 09:47 AM      Profile for Frank Angel   Author's Homepage   Email Frank Angel   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
That's good to know, Mark, I was actually contemplating buying that EL LP player once when the company had a sale -- they had a few going for $6k, but even then it would have started a war in my household. It seems like a good design in theory. I guess what they need is for a big outfit like Panasonic or Sony to make them at a fair price. Reading the grooves using an optical system isn't the hard part, it's getting a mechanism that will track that groove that seems to be the major accomplishment. I corresponded with the CED and explained that if that unit was to find acceptance with the nitch market of audiophiles who still have LPs, he should really look into a financing plan that the company itself would manage or link up with some bank and offer financing thru the bank. Or of course figure out a way to make it cheaper.

Interestingly enough, I saw EARTHQUAKE in a Chicago theatre, but I can't remember its name; I only recall is that it was a movie palace and it had it's entrance right on a street corner with doors facing both of the cross streets; it was maybe only a block or so from the EL.

As it was told to me, that sound anomoly only happened in certain configurations of where the Cerwin Vega speaker bins were placed in a certain way. It was a fairly unpredictable combination of the room acoustics coupling and just bad luck. I don't recall any particular sound problems when I saw it in Chicago, but it was rather pronounced when I saw it again in Brooklyn in the Century Avalon theatre. The projectionist there told me they had some guys from Universal come in to try to fix it and they got it a little better my moving some of the side bins, but it never totally eliminated the problem. Luckily during the earthquake scenes no one was talking much, but the screams had that fluttery sound to them.

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John McConnel
Expert Film Handler

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From: Okmulgee, OK USA
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 - posted 10-04-2005 08:37 PM      Profile for John McConnel   Author's Homepage   Email John McConnel   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Could the theatre in Chicago have been the McVickers?

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Mark Gulbrandsen
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Posts: 16657
From: Music City
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 - posted 10-04-2005 09:52 PM      Profile for Mark Gulbrandsen   Email Mark Gulbrandsen   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
There wass a review in either Absolute Sound or Stereofool on the elaser player. They liked it except for the noise issue. Recording subsonics is easy and Altec maDe mics that are flat down to the 5 hz region and can tolerate 145 db spl! These were mics made post WW-2.
It could have been either McVickers or the United Artists Theatre. The UA was on a corner neaar the EL, so was the Chicago Theatre. I do remember seeing Midway at the Plitt Oakbrook Theatre.

Mark

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Aaron Sisemore
Flaming Ribs beat Reeses Peanut Butter Cups any day!

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From: Rockwall TX USA
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 - posted 10-04-2005 10:05 PM      Profile for Aaron Sisemore   Email Aaron Sisemore   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
FWIW, the ELP laser turntable has some major drawbacks in comparison to a standard stylus-and-cartridge transducer:

1. it is EXTREMELY intolerant of dirty or scratched records. Even tiny (read: invisible) dust particles and scratches will cause it to mistrack horribly...

2. You cannot play anything but black vinyl records. No colored or clear vinyl. (like that matters with some people) [Smile]

Great idea but not yet ready for the majors...

-Aaron

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Josh Jones
Redhat

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From: Plano, TX
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 - posted 10-12-2005 01:42 PM      Profile for Josh Jones   Author's Homepage   Email Josh Jones   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
I would tend to think that some of the fluttering you may have heard is probably your ears going into soft compression. ears, like mics are physical devices and have their limits. I would summize that our ears just run out of headroom when subjected to these high SPL's

JJ

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Andy Summers
Master Film Handler

Posts: 397
From: Bournemouth Dorset United kingdom
Registered: Jun 2005


 - posted 10-14-2005 05:49 PM      Profile for Andy Summers         Edit/Delete Post 
Mark’

Now I have had the same thought, yes a fan, I’m a big fan of sub bass, I like my JBL 4645 modified “THX” but this is a gem how much does it cost?

The more of these units that are installed into the installation will increase the (SPL db fan level) wow, I cant access the web page, I’ve felt some wicked THX presentation sound at the “UCI” High Wycombe 6 many years ago, wicked….

Anyway post a complete schematics diagram for all to see, and doe’s anyone hear have any pictures of the THX 3417 crossover monitor, with the front cover taken off.

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Mark Gulbrandsen
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From: Music City
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 - posted 10-15-2005 08:31 AM      Profile for Mark Gulbrandsen   Email Mark Gulbrandsen   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Andy, It might be a good thing that you can't access that web site!! Its only 13K each.

Mark

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Andy Summers
Master Film Handler

Posts: 397
From: Bournemouth Dorset United kingdom
Registered: Jun 2005


 - posted 10-15-2005 12:26 PM      Profile for Andy Summers         Edit/Delete Post 
Mark’

Oh well plan “B” I well be patient, still looking at this (sub bass fan) is fascinating, is there any other angles of this (sub bass fan) unit to look at…. Fascinating… Mark’

Oh well plan “B” I well be patient, still looking at this (sub bass fan) is fascinating, is there any other angles of this (sub bass fan) unit to look at…. Fascinating… http://temp.corvetteforum.net/bss/nomad/spock_fascinating2.jpg

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