Regarding Bottlehead, I think an amp/pre amp developed to work in unison with the new feastrex driver would be really great.
I was thinking a Feastrex driver developed to work in unison with a Bottlehead amp would be great.
Indeed, Doc. I agree. But I'd offer that the profound amount of development work that's already in the Feastrex drivers calls us to just do our best. So the best I can do at this stage as a dealer for the Feastrex drivers is to design the cabinet. And I think I'll be able to do quite a bit. That is, until a huge pile of cash miraculously falls into my lap. Then we'll talk Blumenstein driver production
Re: Thomas,
In regards to the spherical speaker suggestion, in my opinion, while very stiff, actually results in a speaker with exactly one profound resonance as all radii are the same.
The alternative solution I've found to work over time is to break up resonances in an enclosure by using varying dimensions/facets. In rectangular box design, I try to stay to somewhere around the golden ratio (which is no secret in the world of speaker design). It breaks up the resonances fairly effectively.
Also, in the case of the Orca, the inside does not look the same as the outside... However, I find that bizarrely/randomly faceted enclosures tend to sound a little weird too. So! - everything in moderation - including moderation.
It is worth noting above all else that the Orca cabinet has been designed with just a saw applied many hundreds of times, and many hundreds of sets of ears, and that the same process has been/will be applied to the Feastrexes. That is, cut, try, listen to peoples' feedback, and the sound of the Orcas has improved very gradually but assuredly.
There are many trappings in the design process, but no true short cuts, otherwise after almost 10 years in the audio industry, believe me, I would still be using them.
I don't see myself as merely a proponent of tradition, but rather a cog in the big wheel that keeps on turning slowly - that somehow, strangely took a turn and snowballed me up into it somewhere along the way back when I met Terry Cain, Doc B, and Teramoto-san, and many other inspirational builders of audio gear. but most importantly, and most profoundly, I was snowballed up the day I met myself in the work somewhere along the line.
There are many "cutting edge" objects that are still made in absolute adherence to tradition. Samurai swords are one of them. Feastrex drivers, which have design lineage back to the 1940's (the work of Mr. Sano passed on to Mr. Teramoto), are another.
Feastrex's shop is actually in a region of Japan where traditional apprenticeship to Samurai sword makers is still alive and well.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/secrets-samurai-sword.htmlSo the real challenge to me in the design process of a Feastrex speaker is to understand its nature as a human challenge - how can I bring MY best to the work, MY heart, to be the clearest window into the hearts of others who are involved in the project as well.
Peace,
Clark