Arkay
Lunatic Member
This is the FOURTH (and final!) time I’m trying to post about this... don’t know if it is the new server or what, but I’m fed up with being told I need to sign in again, then that I have selected the wrong forum or some other garbage, and automatically and irretrievably losing the entire post I’ve just written. With over 1,600 posts I thought I knew how to post here… but it sure isn’t working now!
Anyway, I’m writing this in Word and pasting it in, to see if it works. If it doesn’t, at least I won’t have to re-type everything from the beginning:
PART ONE: THE SPEAKERS:
Today I got another pair of ESS speakers, this time the ESS Tempest Model 9.
I’ll tell the (amusing) story of how I got them in a second post (if this one works).
These seem a little different from the other Tempest descriptions I find online. Serial numbers are consecutive, ending in 0099 and 0100, so I would assume they are the 99th and 100th ones produced in this series.
They have the smaller, surface-mounted Heil AMT with the single curved magnet over the front of the (black Teflon) diaphragm, not the "Great" dipole AMT that came in the 1Bs. A label beside the AMT describes how it functions, and mentions that the crossover point for it is 2400 Hz. The diaphragm is vertically pleated and smaller (shorter) than the one in the "Great" Heil. There is a little surface corrosion (rust) on the magnets :sigh: , so I'll have to clean them up, but the diaphragms appear to be in good shape.
There is a single ten-inch woofer in each speaker, but NO passive radiator or port: just a single acoustic-suspension woofer and the AMT tweeter. That seems unusual for these [ESS loved PRs!], as does the paper-cone woofer (not poly) with the smaller Heil. It was my understanding that the paper cones preceded the poly ones, but the smaller Teflon-diaphragm AMTs came later. This speaker, then, would have early woofers with later AMTs. :headscrat I’m a little confused. Need to do more rigorous research with dates, I guess.
The boxes are veneered with real walnut, and have nice connections in back, along with nicely-shaped knobs (plastic that reminds me of bakelite!) for the tweeter adjustments (pot or L-pad things). Better-looking (and probably earlier?) back connections than I've seen on most ESS speakers.
Cosmetically they are so-so: some veneer edges are worn in spots, and there is a chip in the veneer on one. :tears: The front edges (into which the grill should set) are beveled/angled. They remind me of the later-model AR 2ax cases I got recently, in that respect. The grills, unfortunately, were missing - along with their badges. :tears:
Does anyone know about these Tempest “Model 9” speakers (as opposed to other models and ESS in general, about which I find quite a bit of info online)?
I'm thinking about using them for rears, to complement the (soon to be modified) ESS AMT 1bs for front speakers... if they sound at least up to the level of other ESS speakers I've heard. Otherwise I'll probably sell them to help pay for something else I have my eye on... although I'm reluctant to sell Heils of any type, especially since there is a 95 percent chance that anyone I sell these two locally (Hong Kong) will pull out the AMTs and trash the rest, which I would hate to see/let happen.
Anyway, I’m writing this in Word and pasting it in, to see if it works. If it doesn’t, at least I won’t have to re-type everything from the beginning:
PART ONE: THE SPEAKERS:
Today I got another pair of ESS speakers, this time the ESS Tempest Model 9.
I’ll tell the (amusing) story of how I got them in a second post (if this one works). These seem a little different from the other Tempest descriptions I find online. Serial numbers are consecutive, ending in 0099 and 0100, so I would assume they are the 99th and 100th ones produced in this series.
They have the smaller, surface-mounted Heil AMT with the single curved magnet over the front of the (black Teflon) diaphragm, not the "Great" dipole AMT that came in the 1Bs. A label beside the AMT describes how it functions, and mentions that the crossover point for it is 2400 Hz. The diaphragm is vertically pleated and smaller (shorter) than the one in the "Great" Heil. There is a little surface corrosion (rust) on the magnets :sigh: , so I'll have to clean them up, but the diaphragms appear to be in good shape.
There is a single ten-inch woofer in each speaker, but NO passive radiator or port: just a single acoustic-suspension woofer and the AMT tweeter. That seems unusual for these [ESS loved PRs!], as does the paper-cone woofer (not poly) with the smaller Heil. It was my understanding that the paper cones preceded the poly ones, but the smaller Teflon-diaphragm AMTs came later. This speaker, then, would have early woofers with later AMTs. :headscrat I’m a little confused. Need to do more rigorous research with dates, I guess.
The boxes are veneered with real walnut, and have nice connections in back, along with nicely-shaped knobs (plastic that reminds me of bakelite!) for the tweeter adjustments (pot or L-pad things). Better-looking (and probably earlier?) back connections than I've seen on most ESS speakers.
Cosmetically they are so-so: some veneer edges are worn in spots, and there is a chip in the veneer on one. :tears: The front edges (into which the grill should set) are beveled/angled. They remind me of the later-model AR 2ax cases I got recently, in that respect. The grills, unfortunately, were missing - along with their badges. :tears:
Does anyone know about these Tempest “Model 9” speakers (as opposed to other models and ESS in general, about which I find quite a bit of info online)?
I'm thinking about using them for rears, to complement the (soon to be modified) ESS AMT 1bs for front speakers... if they sound at least up to the level of other ESS speakers I've heard. Otherwise I'll probably sell them to help pay for something else I have my eye on... although I'm reluctant to sell Heils of any type, especially since there is a 95 percent chance that anyone I sell these two locally (Hong Kong) will pull out the AMTs and trash the rest, which I would hate to see/let happen.