EPOS ES-14N Standmount Loudspeaker - Pair + EPOS ES-14N Stands - Pair - Black Finish
- £4,400.00
-
£3,300.00
EPOS ES-14N Standmount Loudspeaker - Pair + EPOS ES-14N Stands - Pair - Black Finish
Ex-Demo Pair of Epos EPOS ES-14N Standmount Loudspeakers in
Black Finish with EPOS ES-14 Stands in black finish.
These loudspeakers and stands are in lovely condition.
Comes with all original packaging etc.
BACK TO THE FUTURE
A classic speaker returns to the future.
Concept:
Restarting EPOS could only mean re-creating the most famous
model, the ES-14. This was a 2-way speaker in a fairly big cabinet and classic
looking cabinet, to be used on a dedicated stand. The design should be classic,
not lifestyle, only doing things that help with the sound and as straight
forward as possible.
Analyzing the old construction was interesting. It used a 7“
woofer with Polypropylene cone and an underhang coil with a huge magnet, but
multiple layers of VC winding to make the whole coil heavy in order to get a
sort of roll-off in the response curve of the woofer. The size of the woofer
was not following any standard – too big for a 6.5“, but too small for an 8“.
But it was a clever choice, because you could get more drive at lower
frequencies more like an 8“ and a midband character closer to the 6.5“.
Cabinet:
The cabinet itself is using more or less the same volume of
the original ES-14. That’s not a big surprise, as the cabinet volume is the result
of the driver configuration and the defined bandwidth of the speaker. However,
the shape of the cabinet is different. The front baffle is tilted to the back
in order to time align the woofer and the tweeter plus it can help with the
standing wave mode between front and back. As the design is a reflex system, a
port is of course needed. It’s located on the back of the cabinet and the whole
shape of the port has been chosen to minimize air flow noise. In order to
compensate for the open tube resonance of the port, some openings were added in
the middle of the port. To avoid loss of low bottom end, those openings are
covered with soft material, tuned to only kill the unwanted resonances of the
port.
The cabinet uses a double layer MDF construction, glued together
with the latest generation of damping glue. This latest generation is more
consistent compared to older solutions and allows easier production. Additional
bracing has been used to control the panel vibration modes and reduce the
unwanted radiation of the whole cabinet. Only a little damping material is
needed internally.
The front plate is an extra part to be glued and screwed on
the main cabinet. It has a 45° chamfer around it to control diffraction effect
in the 2000-3000Hz region. The first prototypes used square cabinets and it was
impossible to get a good frequency response on axis and out of axis. Rounding
the corners was not really helping, only the chamfer made the diffraction error
a lot smaller and helped balancing the upper midband. An old fashion way, but a
useful solution. The speaker comes with front grille, but it is not recommended
to use it when listening to music. It’s more a protector when not using the
speakers. The tweeter itself is protected anyway and the PP cone is not easy to
damage.
The alignment of the box is a flat 4th oder alignment with a
tuning frequency of 38Hz. It matches with the bottom end gain of many listening
rooms and allows fast and precise bottom end when used in the right position in
the room. The binding posts are 4mm banana sockets, mounted on a metal plate.
Those banana sockets use very little metal internally to guarantee the best
sound – that’s one of the nice ideas of the original design and better than
using very expensive “High-End“ binding posts with litte metal but a high price
tag. Those single wiring sockets feed the amplifier signal to a crossover that
sits on the rear panel of the speaker.
Crossover:
The original crossover needed very little components and was
extremely simple, the new ES-14N follows the experience of the last 20 years
that electrical parts are easier to control than mechanical filtering in driver
units. In earlier days, before Klippel, the multilayer coil of the original
woofer was designed in a way that it rolled off the woofer with the weight and
the high inductance of the windings.
The original crossover needed very little components and was
extremely simple, the new ES-14N follows the experience of the last 20 years
that electrical parts are easier to control than mechanical filtering in driver
units. In earlier days, before Klippel, the multilayer coil of the original
woofer was designed in a way that it rolled off the woofer with the weight and
the high inductance of the windings. In the new woofer, the coil is only
2-layer and with compensation rings, the impedance over excursion is very
constant and that avoids modulation of the crossover. The coil is executed as
air coil and adds no core distortion. A non compensated magnet, would indeed
react with a crossover and that means the old idea made sense. However, the way
to roll off the woofer with high inductance, added another set of problems –
but we learned about it only in the last 20 years. There is a small resistance
between the woofer and the amplifier in tower to make the design less sensitive
to different damping factors. Instead a larger magnet controls the alignment.
The tweeter is using no Ferrofluid in the gap to suppress the resonance
frequency of the tweeter. Ferrofluid sounds like a good idea, but it is a sort
of oil that changes behavior when playing music. This is a very non linear
process and modifies the sound depending on level and music style. Tweeters
with no Ferrofluid are more open and natural and show less dynamic compression
compared to standard tweeters with Ferrofluid. The other side of the coin: it
needs a bit more crossover to be safe, but the total combination is a lot more
linear. Even so the metal dome peak is shifted to around 30kHz, a new sort of
filter has been added to notch it out without changing the level below 20kHz.
The reason is that modern digital converters are shifting a lot of noise to
higher frequencies.
Impedance:
The speaker should be an easy load for amplifiers – that’s
why the average impedance is higher than a usual 4 Ohm speaker. I also got a
compensation in the midband to make it easier for tube amplifiers.
Mid/BassDrive Unit:
A 7“ driver designed for use in a ported speaker plus
compensation for higher resistance air coil. Choice of Polypropylene as cone
material was set from the beginning. Polypropylene is a nice material – very
consistent, can be made with different filling material like MICA and it can
even be injection moulded for funny shapes or variations in thickness. Combined
with a low damping rubber surround, it delivers lots of dynamics with very low
colouration.
The 36mm voice coil of the unit was a relatively straight
forward choice. It uses a 18mm long 2-layer winding of copper wire on a non
metallic TIL former (TIL is a Glasfiber/Epoxy mix ). The shape of the magnet
was optimized, using simulation, to have the best linear BL behavior and a very
low variation in inductance over the movement of the coil. This gives you the
lowest level of linear distortion and Intermodulation distortion and is clearly
different to the magnet system used in the old days. variations. The main
magnet is a Ferrite type, the flux compensation magnet reduces the stray field
of the magnet and set the right BL for the cabinet size. A Neodymium disk on
the pole piece made the BL more linear and a metal phase plug helps to move
heat from the coil. All the parts are mounted into a very strong glass filled
plastic basket made from scratch. The material was chosen for the combination
of stiffness and good damping.
Tweeter:
28mm VC for better performance at the lower end of the
tweeter range. The dome itself is made out of an Aluminum alloy with additional
ceramic coating to increase the stiffness. Together with the fabric surround
and a shaped Mode control ring, the resonance peak of the tweeter is around
30kHz, shifting it out of the 20kHz limit of human hearing. The magnet system
uses Ferrite magnets and an improved cavity combination to minimize distortion.
Ferrite is the better material for a tweeter if a small size is not needed. It
offers a lot more “air“ behind the dome and the surround and avoids compression
and harmonic distortion because too small cavities. A copper cap in the magnet
reduces distortion and increases level at very high frequencies. The tweeter
used no waveguide for sound reasons. To protect the dome, an oval asymmetric
mounted perforated metal grill has been added. This part is not removable and
was used during the voicing of the speaker. The massive metal plate of the
tweeter is only touching the cabinet on 4 points around the screws (idea taken
from Roy George of NAIM with his blessing) to reduce a transfer of energy
between tweeter and cabinet baffle.
The tweeter has its own cavity in the cabinet.
Stand:
To give the speaker a home to sit on, a dedicated stand is
available. The middle part is made as a massive wooden bar, combining 4 layers
of wood, glued together with same damping glue used internally in the ES14N.
The top plate is a double layer steel plate with a Bitumen layer in between and
the bottom plate is a thick steel plate to hold adjustable spikes. The Speaker
can be shipped without a stand, so other 55cm high stands can be used as
well.
6 Months Warranty (Terms & Conditions Apply) - Excludes Misuse (30 Days for Valves)
Loudspeakers | |
Frequency Response | 40Hz – 23kHz (-6dB) 33Hz – 25kHz (-10dB) |
Sensitivity | 87dB @oe2.823V / 1m |
Nominal Impedance | 6 Ohm |
Crossover Frequency | 2700 Hz |
Type | Rear Ported |
Drive Units | BASS/MID: High Power 7“, 35 mm voice coil diameter, Hybrid Ferrite and Neodymium magnet, injection moulded cone with variable thickness and Mica filling. Low hysteresis rubber surround. TWEETER: 28 mm tweeter with Aluminium/Ceramic compound dome and no Ferrofluid |
Dimensions Each (H x W x D) | 491mm x 250 mm x 385 mm (each) |
Loudspeaker Weight | 16KG (each) |