Electro Voice Serial Numbers
E-V licensed the folded corner design from Klipsch. You could buy factory built models from E-V like the snazzy one in the picture, or build them youself. My dad built a couple of those back in the 50's with plans he purchased from E-V (he made one for himself, and one for his brother). Both of them are now at my folks' house, but their living room isn't large enough to accomodate a pair, so one resides in the basement.
The thing I notice is when listening to my dad's speaker is how easily a Geargian fills the room with bass. Free Midi Files Pretty Woman. According to Klipsch, the woofer was never moving more than about a 16th of an inch or so in the lowest octave it goes, so the 15' woofer is loafing. Click to expand.I've seen people selling Georgians for several hundred dollars, and others trying to get 2 or 3 thousand for them. Since they're about the size of a small refrigerator, shipping them is a major pain/major expense.
Serial number/s, no serial. Type, dynamic. Connector, XLR. Production date, 70s. Optical condition. Screen, good, dent. Technical condition, perfectly working. Accessories, w/ orig. Pattern/s, supercardioid. Recommended for, live-vocals, harp. Electro‑Voice engineers leading‑edge sound reinforcement solutions with products designed to provide best‑in‑class performance, reliability and value.
You occasionally run into a seller who will gut the speaker for the drivers (usually a T-35 tweeter, and a 15W-K woofer). I think the K designation is for Klipsch - they used E-V drivers in the 50's for the woofer, and that midrange horn is an 848-HF. The raw drivers are worth severeal hundred dollars on their own - the woofer is a premium model with a really good sized magnet. The cabinet is extremely labor intensive with plenty of interesting cuts in the lumber. Everything has to be cut very precisely and fitted properly or the folded horn won't couple properly with the driver. The bulk of the cost in purchasing one of these speakers is thecabinet - it would cost a small fortune for a cabinet maker to build one properly to spec, and then apply a nice veneer finish over the plywood shell. Click to expand.If someone inherited it and had no idea what it was they were probably delighted to get rid of it.
It has to be located in a corner or there's basically no bass response. I can see someone hooking one up in the middle of the room and wondering why such a big speaker sounds all midrangey and squawky. You really need a big space to properly enjoy a horn loaded speaker.
It's like moving a refrigerator into your living room - it eats up a lot of room and is extremely visible. As for the tar - you would most likely need to very carefully score the tar with a utility knife to get access to the woofer.
Sankat Mochan Mahabali Hanuman Serial Song Mp3 Free Download. Click to expand.Hi Scott. I have never had a mono system, but after getting this I am seriously considering it. I have a pair of McIntosh MC40 amps and currently am using one of them to drive the EV. I have 2 TT in my stereo system, so moving one to a mono system would be easy enough.
No mono cart yet. I also picked up a Brook Model 7 mono preamp about a year ago with a bunch of EQ settings that needs a complete going over. So it seems a dedicated mono system is being acquired without that being my intention. Do you have experience with a dedicated mono system? I would appreciate your thoughts.