Nice! The Abby's are good cabinets that do generally good things with many 6"er's
I've tried -
- FE166ES-R - SUWEET sound! These were my favorite. I am glad Terry nudged me to get a set back when they were available.
- FE166E - Original Cain and Cain sound and very nicely balanced overall. Definitely needs some room treatment to take care of a few small (and minor) shouts between 2-4khz
- FE166En - I like them just a little better than the 166E - Just a tad though, and its hard to say exactly how as the drivers were in different points in their breakin
- FE163EN-S (not in Abby's, but did like them alot. These were not a total improvement over the 166ES-R's to my ears, so I sold them)
- FF165K - with both the rear mounted t96A and also a front firing t90A. This was very nice, but I found out ultimately that I'd rather have a single driver do the whole thing.
- Old Sigmas - these were great! Little known, that the Abby was originally designed around them. They were made in Japan IIRC (?)
- New Sigmas - great bass drivers, nasty up top (IMO) Just some sort of Zing in the upper treble range.
- FE168ES - these are great drivers, very hard to find though. They are the New sigmas with more resolution and no treble nastiness (and a double magnet), though they do need some help up top.
I have not heard the 165WK, but I am sure they are quite decent - definitely a step up from the old 165k.
Though the size isn't the same, I did hear the FF85Wk and while they did nice things down low, they had a pretty obvious Zing in the upper treble that turned my ears off. But the same was true of the old FF85k for me as well. Too much 16khz for my taste. Must be the metal dome. I know... you can probably correct it out, but I am a purist about those things in general, and I prefer a little softer treble in favor of a little too much.
My personal set of Noogi's got FE87's, 87e's, 85k's. I preferred the 83E's, but the bass didn't work right in the Noogi cabinet, so I started making traditional bass reflexes for them... this was the beginning of the Orcas. As you might imagine, Both the Abby's and the Noogi's served as substantial inspiration for the little Orcas we now make. I tried to get a similarly warm sound of the Abby's into a much smaller physical package than even the Noogi's, trading high volumes for sweeter treble, better lower midrange body, and better treble dispersion.
Some odd drivers I've tried in the Abbys -
-Lowther DX2 - no bass, really forward... not the right cabinet at all. They worked better in double horns.
-Dayton PS220's, which work good in the bass, but have nasty treble that needs correcting (IMO)
My old personal set of Abby's are now in use within the business of a friend of mine - Mace Mead Works, in Dayton Washington. They are now outfitted (and EQed) for Dayton PS220's. They have no bases installed on the bottoms, (vent straight out), and are hung upside down from the ceiling. They serve as vocal PA in Reggie Mace's performance venue. He calls these speakers the "Muffrockets" IIRC.
http://macemeadworks.com/Well, I figured I may as well share my experiences on this front. The Abby's are out of production now but there are many owners looking at some of the newer Fostex drivers so I figured I may as well weigh in on Terry's behalf.
Cheers!
-Clark