And what country can preserve its liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
The speaker cabinet selection is very interesting: - In front on the left is a low-range, back-loaded folded horn design with what looks to be a 12” driver. The design is a variation on the JBL 4530 cabinet from the 70s. I had a pair of 15” driven cabs that I used on stage with my GMT300B amp and my P-bass. The cellular horn on top is almost certainly a JBL unit, although it could be EV. The crossover frequency between the two was usually set at 1250 Hz. - Behind that cabinet looks to be a Klipsch with a shape like a corner horn, but the front isn’t right. - To the right of that is a cabinet with a single small driver, so it is probably a multi-way cabinet with the low-freq drivers obscured by the tape deck.
The tape deck doesn’t look like any Teac deck that I owned. I believe that it could be a Pioneer deck, but I’m not sure.
The amp is a mystery, but probably one kind of mono block or another. The turntable is very interesting design with what looks to be a lot of dampening as well as oversize controls.
The cabinets have that DIY look (nothing wrong with that IMO), and that could explain why what appears to be Klipsch design does not have the correct front appearance.
real speakers!
ReplyDeleteTeac tape deck? I think so.
ReplyDeleteThe speaker cabinet selection is very interesting:
ReplyDelete- In front on the left is a low-range, back-loaded folded horn design with what looks to be a 12” driver. The design is a variation on the JBL 4530 cabinet from the 70s. I had a pair of 15” driven cabs that I used on stage with my GMT300B amp and my P-bass. The cellular horn on top is almost certainly a JBL unit, although it could be EV. The crossover frequency between the two was usually set at 1250 Hz.
- Behind that cabinet looks to be a Klipsch with a shape like a corner horn, but the front isn’t right.
- To the right of that is a cabinet with a single small driver, so it is probably a multi-way cabinet with the low-freq drivers obscured by the tape deck.
The tape deck doesn’t look like any Teac deck that I owned. I believe that it could be a Pioneer deck, but I’m not sure.
The amp is a mystery, but probably one kind of mono block or another. The turntable is very interesting design with what looks to be a lot of dampening as well as oversize controls.
The cabinets have that DIY look (nothing wrong with that IMO), and that could explain why what appears to be Klipsch design does not have the correct front appearance.
Delete