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Секреты самураев-аудиофилов: Yamaha YH-100 (orthodynamic)
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Alex | Дата: Пятница, 16.06.2017 | Сообщение # 1 |
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| В конце 70х годов прошлого века Hi-Fi отрасль в Японии испытывала небывалый расцвет. Касалась эта тема и наушников. Компания Yamaha аккурат в год моего рождения презентовала первые модели наушников с излучателями ортодинамического типа, радикально иного принципа чем электродинамические, с подвижной катушкой.
Первыми исторически (1975) была модель HP-1, очень родная взгляду российских аудиолюбителей прошлого века, поскольку именна эта модель была клонирована нашими производителями и продавалась в CCCР как ТДС-5.
Цитата Если кратко про наиболее известные модельные линейки ортодинамики Yamaha, то их 3:
1. Yamaha YH-1000. Других моделей в линейке нет. Полуоткрытые, алюминиевые чаши, магниты из редкоземельных металлов, медный проводник на мембране, заводское полноценное демпфирование. Уникальное оголовье.
2. Yamaha YH-100. Других моделей в линейке нет. Закрытые наушники с вентиляционными отверстиями. В оригинальном виде имеют сильный акцент на басе, бас глубокий.
3. Yamaha HP/YH-1,2,3. Линейка состоит из 3-х моделей. HP - более ранние варианты, видимо, делались поначалу только для внутреннего потребления в Японии. YH - более поздние варианты, продавались дешевле, с худшим контролем качества.
HP(YH)-1 - старшая модель в линейке. Не хватает нижнего баса, который есть у YH-100, в остальном звучание аналогичное 100-й модели. В России заочно самая известная модель, так как именно с нее "содрали" конструкцию при "разработке" Электроники ТДС-5.
HP(YH)-2 - изготовлена из более дешевых материалов по сравнению с HP(YH)-1, в частности, что приводит к крошащимся со временем амбюшурам. Контроль качества у YH-2 хуже, что приводит к большему разбросу в звучании между экземплярами, чем в случае HP-2.
HP(YH)-3 - отличается оголовье, менее хрупкое, лучше подходящее к портативному использованию. Еще хуже контроль качества. Некоторые экземпляры - монстры баса, другие - с весьма хлипким басом. В итоге можно купить экземпляр, напоминающий "YH-100 для бедняков", или гораздо менее удачный экземпляр с проблемным басом. Для YH-3 была еще вариация с маркировкой HP-50, которая продавалась в комплекте с синтезаторами yamaha.
Хронология: 1975 - Yamaha HP-1, HP-2. 1976-? Yamaha HP-3. 1978 - Yamaha YH-1000, HP-1000, YH-1, YH-2 , YH-3. 1979 - Yamaha YH-100.
Драйвера: Yamaha YH-1000. Драйвер 50 мм, магниты из редко встречающихся в природе церия и кобальта. Yamaha YH-100. Драйвер 55 мм. Использованы более сильные железные магниты, поэтому чувствительность на 4дб лучше, чем у HP(YH)-1, при равном размере драйвера.
HP(YH)-1. Драйвер 55 мм. HP(YH)-2. Драйвер 46 мм. HP(YH)-3. Драйвер 46 мм. Легким особняком была модель вставных ортодинамических наушников Yamaha YH-5m на базе уникального излучателя , материал о которой есть здесь на сайте. Чуть позже появилась линейка YHD для потративного применения, на базе более маленьких драйверов и со складным оголовьем.
Yamaha YH3, YH2 и YHD-2
Самые дорогие модели из всего этого винтажного наследия (и самые редкие) это HP(YH)-1000 и YH-5m на базе сложных магнитных систем, отличающиеся очень высокой индукцией в зазоре и чувствительностью, в итоге. Чуть ниже в табели о рангах идет топовая модель линейки 1980-81 года YH100, о которой далее и пойдет речь...
Оголовье представляет собой нечто среднее между HP(YH)-1 и HP(YH)-1000
Драйвер 55 мм, по диаметру эквивалентен таковому у HP1, но громче на 4дб.
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Alex | Дата: Пятница, 16.06.2017 | Сообщение # 2 |
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| Замер от innerfidelity
И для савнения на тех же стендах
Yamaha HP-1 Yamaha YH-3
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Alex | Дата: Вторник, 20.06.2017 | Сообщение # 3 |
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| Оставлю тут обьемную табель о рангах сред винтажной ортодинамики (как всегда, относится к рейтингам стоит с попроавкой на субьективизм, но тем не менее):
Цитата Wualta: 05-15-2009
My opinions are based on the mods we have as of this moment and ranked by the results of those mods that I have heard myself, with exceptions noted. Tomorrow someone will get a bright idea and cure a longstanding peeve. A miracle might even occur: Someday, someone might be able to get bass from a Bang & Olufsen U70 without EQ. So this ranking is fluid. Case in point: the recent discovery by the proprietor of this here Wiki that Fostex significantly improved the sound of the once-thought-worthless current production T50RP. So don't just read the top few entries and run off waving your mom's credit card at the nearest online auction.
Some mods are effective but getting them just right is a pain. Some headphones are just physically difficult to work on. These are noted but don't affect the ratings.
And it's worth repeating that with different mods come very different sounds from a single headphone. You can customize many of these 'phones to match your equipment, and of course different equipment will change the sound a headphone makes. It should be kept in mind that lesser phones, once modded, can have more treble and bass extension than even the vaunted T50v1, but won't have its openness and the ease of a certain big-diaphragm je ne sais quois. So hang loose, ortho brothers; none of this is chiseled in stone.
Top Tier:
1. Fostex T50 (original version, 1978-79, aka T50v1)-- Really stinkin' rare. Keep your eyes peeled but don't hold your breath. Sounds very much like the Stax SR-X Mk 3 but with bass. Not basshead bass, and not the best, tightest bass you ever heard (the little Pro 30 beats it) but clean, pleasing bass. One of the hallmarks of the sound of this phone is emotional, not acoustic: when you wear the T50 you get the feeling of being in a world where everything is wonderfully balanced, where nothing is too much or too little, like good Asian cuisine. The T50 does everything well, though it does nothing better than all others. The response is smooth, extended (but not too much) and flat. Damping is factory-tuned (but because there is damping, headstage is not Lambdalike as you might expect). It's reasonably efficient (for good dynamic range) but not so much that you'll hear residual amp noise.
However, with all the different levels of Hell you'll have to go through to get one, the psychic bottom line looks far better for one of the 2nd tier 'phones, which can be modded to give similar, sometimes superior, but not identical results. Did I say rare? Rare. Fostex never made another headphone like it, and neither did anyone else. Is it the Best Headphone Ever? No, not at all, just a very capable and enjoyable one for the reasons outlined, and a great preview (or tease) of the isodynamic future that never came but which may yet come. Don't step on a friend to obtain one-- it's not worth that.
2. The T50 (2 versions, 1978-79 and 1980-?) is not to be confused with the different-looking 2002 Fostex T50RP (which also has two versions. See below). The 1980 Fostex T50v2, which looks like the v1 but with a different headband and subtly different cosmetics, is related to the v1 but uses a visibly different diaphragm. Only 1 example is owned by an HF member, and I haven't heard it. Confusingly, Fostex called it simply a T50.
Also confusingly, Fostex OEM'd several versions of the T50v2 using drivers that looked like (but didn't sound like) the T50v1's for NAD, Maior, Lafayette, and possibly others, but using the headband and cosmetics of the T50v2. None of these "clones" can be ranked as high as the T50v1, usually because the treble is weak, but not always (the uber-rare Maior is an exception).
Even more confusingly, there's evidence that some of the clones and variants actually predate the North American market introduction of the T50, leading to the suspicion that what the NA market knows as the T50 was actually a special model designed specifically to emulate the sound of electrostatics of the day. The Stax SR-X Mk 3 was introduced about a year earlier. Coincidence?
Close to top but with reservations:
3. Yamaha YH-100-- This is a vented-closed 'phone, so it'll never sound exactly like a T50, but it can sound really freakin' good in a variety of ways. Has bass and treble extension beyond that of the T50. Tricky to get exactly precisely obsessively perfectly right, but one of the few old Orthos that needs make no apologies.
[Полузакрытый дизайн означает что эта модель никогда не будет звучать также, как Т50, однако YH-100 звучат чертовски привлекательно и своеобразно. И бас и ВЧ более протяжены чем у Т50. Чтобы быть предельно точным, это одна из моделей старой ортодинамики беспощадно правильная по звуку]
4. Yamaha YH-1000-- Yamaha's flagship TOTL SOTA Orthodynamic. Even more rare than the Fostex T50v1, but you'll hear a lot about it, so it's here. Yamaha put the big earcup attachment/adjustment block right behind a vented-back earcup (a no-no), but yes, the YH-1000 does have a semi-open back and Yamaha did use some mechanical damping (plus some acoustic absorption) in the 1000, the only time they ever did both on any Orthodynamic. A quick look at the service manual and it's obvious Yamaha was pulling out all the Ortho stops (semi-open back! aluminum cups! rare earth magnets! copper voice coil! damping!). Nevertheless, it's basically a first-generation Orthodynamic, with a nontensioned pleated diaphragm clamped in the center, just like the HP-1/2/3.
Few people own this phone and fewer have described its sound, but the ones who own it do like it a lot. Sonically, it's dark, obviously a relative of the YH-100, but like the YH-100 it has great potential. The one example I've heard has light damping added but is still dark, pretty much as the frequency response graph published by Yamaha shows-- a 3dB/octave downward tilt hinged at 1 kHz. This is usual for Orthodynamics, but the YH-1000 seems more linear (fewer bumps and detours in the tilted response curve) than its lesser brothers, which means the diaphragm is well-controlled and the response should flatten out nicely with relatively simple modifications. The linearity means that this headphone will sound pleasing even when its response hasn't been made flat.
Caveats: Two known examples have had corrosion problems on the copper voice coil, requiring painstaking repair involving disassembly of the driver and the use of a binocular microscope to re-paint the tiny copper traces. Something to keep in mind if one is contemplating spending big money for a YH-1000. Also, despite the metal earcups, the struts that attach the earcups to the headband are plastic, as in the HP-1/2/3 and YH-100. Don't drop this 'phone.
A rare landmark headphone in great demand.
5. Fostex T20RP (first version, aka T20v2-- another good all-rounder, not rare, usually reasonably priced, and easy to work on. Dull and blah in stock form, though not actively unlistenably bad. Like the YH-100, needs extra-dense damping materials, which may take some time to find. Not to be confused with the later and similar-looking T20RP mk II, which is good only if it has the new-style earpads.
6. Yamaha YHE-50S-- another very rare one but since it's based on the more common YHD-3 (which I haven't heard, but which should be very similar), and has unique features which can be copied by DIYers, I thought I'd include it. Think of a miniaturized YH-100 with an open(ish) back. That's saying a lot. There's also a mono version, the YHE-50A. Small enough and efficient enough to be used with portable gear. Rated over the TOTL YHD-1 and YHD-2 because it has earcups (backwave control) and earpads (ditto). Note that the YHD-3 lacks the earpads and uses fabric-covered foam slabs instead.
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Alex | Дата: Вторник, 20.06.2017 | Сообщение # 4 |
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| Цитата 2nd tier:
Yamaha HP/YH-1-- A good place to start your career as an apprentice Orthodynamicist. The low bass of the YH-100 is missing, but everything else is there with the simplest of mods (the socalled Stage One-- a simple felt disc or two placed behind the driver). If you're not a basshead, get one while the online auction prices are still reasonable... sometimes. Not the easiest headphone to work on due to idiosyncratic mechanical design. NOTE: There's an upgraded HP-1 with "keeper" plates on its magnets, giving 2dB greater efficiency. Comes in a black (not silver) box, still labeled "HP-1". Look for the phrase anisotropic ferrite in the specs.
Yamaha HP/YH-2-- Used some cheaper materials than its big brother the HP/YH-1, leading to some problems with crumbling foam in some cases, but sonically very like the HP/YH-1. Just won't play as loud. Comes in a spiffy maroon color. Quality control is a bit looser on this pair of twins, so your YH-2 may not sound like your HP-2. A pain to work on, though as with the HP/YH-1, the results will wash away your tears.
Yamaha YHD-1 and YHD-2-- I badmouthed the YHD-2 for years, but mine must have been atypical-- a nice way of saying busted. Oh,the hazards of judging a headphone from a single sample! Auditioning another YHD-2 plus the evaluations of other YHD-2 owners over the years has shown that the YHD-2 is a slightly less efficient and bassy YHD-1, pretty much as we'd expect. Smooth but dull out of the box, but that's what we want for a good modification outcome. A work of art that's actually a good working headphone. Downgraded only because they lack pads (which can be tweaked to tweak the sound) and cups, which give you backwave control plus room for damping materials. Otherwise they'd be in the 1st tier with the YHD-50S. As compensation the open design offers some extra headstage.
Audio-Technica ATH-2 -- Not too common and slightly crippled by a thick, stingily-perforated baffle, it's one of the very few inexpensive isodynamics with an open back. Easy to work on. Driver virtually identical to the one in the Pro 30. To operate at its full potential, the baffle has to be partially cut away, so not an easy mod for perfectionists.
Realistic Pro 30-- Cheap to buy, easy to mod, can give astounding results for effort expended, good (I'm tempted to say killer) bass, compact on the head except for the "antlers". What's not to like? Well, maybe the slightly elevated (but flat) upper midrange and treble. Sentimental favorite, since it was my first wholly successful mod, ca. 1987. The 'phone that should've spread isodynamicry to the masses, and may yet.
Yama HP-3/YH-3-- A bit of a gamble, due to very loose quality control. Some HP/YH-3s are poor-man's YH-100s and some aren't. Not the most common of the Orthodynamics, but not rare (yet). The variant HP-50 series(50, 50A, 50S) were designed to be sold with Yamaha electronic organs. Some claim the HP-50 series uses a unique, superior driver-- all I can say is mine does sound more like my YH-2 more than my HP-3 or YH-3. HP-50 series 'phones all come with a white paperlike layer over the front of the driver-- intended function yet to be determined. Snap-together construction (no screws), which sometimes leaves backwave-leaking gaps. NOTE: The HP-50A is wired mono and must be recabled for stereo.
Fostex T40RP (first version, aka T40v1-- The lack of deep bass is a deficit but not a huge one and bass EQ works well. Very extended and smooth top end, like no other non-stat headphone I've heard. One of the easiest mods (a chunk of foam) gets you there. Same warning as above about confusing this with its Mk II version applies.
3rd tier:
Fostex T50v2 OEMs, aka "T50v2 clones" or "T50 clones" (1980--86?)-- (includes NAD RP18, Maior RPT-50 and Lafayette RP 50)-- For the 1980 model year, Fostex changed the T50's headband from pivoted twin leather-covered-steel bands to a single padded plastic piece, and this is the headband we see on the OEMs labeled Maior, NAD, and Lafayette. Frankly, and to give you a basis for comparison, I like the modded YH-100 far better than the Maior, which suffers because it has an elevated midrange / treble. The NAD, on the other hand, starts dropping after ~2 kHz and keeps dropping-- Bass City. Now, having said that, the clones are T50s in every other respect-- it just sounds like there's a little guy inside with a graphic equalizer who's hellbent on futzing with the sound. Sigh. UPDATE: as noted above, these have what look like T50v1 drivers inside a chassis that looks like the T50v2, but the genuine and exceedingly rare Fostex-branded T50v2 (which Fostex flabbergastingly insisted on labeling simply T50) has a similar driver with a unique diaphragm and which doesn't sound like any of the OEM clones, according to the one owner we know of. Confused yet?
Again, this not to be confused with the much later and very different T50RP, which, I remind you once more, is now being smiled upon by Fostex in the form of life-giving new earpads, making it, in today's online-auction market, 1) affordable 2) available 3)listenable (good, not great) in stock form. Which is so unexpected it's ridiculous. So: if it doesn't have the new earpads (see the T50RP section of this wiki for photos), don't buy it. Make sure your seller has the latest production, known in Japan as T50RPn.
Fostex T30-- Great potential, but will need a lot of work to get at all of it. Very similar to the T50 inside, but with a less powerful, slightly less open magnet structure and a sound that's tilted basswise very much like the NAD, above. Though the dark sound of the big diaphragm grabs your attention right away and you find yourself listening to it, you won't for long-- the T30 is shockingly uncomfortable to wear. Just about as rare as the T50. Some HFers have devised big circumaural pads for the T30 that make it comfortable.
Sansui SS-100-- Fostex-made, with a driver that's a cross between the one in the T50v1 and the T30 but slightly closer to the T50. Arguably the prettiest ortho/iso ever made. Sonically similar to the Maior RPT-50 (good, not great; weak bass; not easy to work on), ergonomically clumsy (the earcups don't pivot but float on a rubber subchassis) and therefore a disappointment. Rare again.
Fostex T20v1-- Fostex's most famous headphone, used in recording studios worldwide, but definitely not audiophile material without modding, and difficult to get sounding just right. Comfortable, not expensive, easy to work on, but not very efficient and has an upper midrange peak that's hard to tame because it's caused by the conical shape of the baffle.
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Alex | Дата: Вторник, 20.06.2017 | Сообщение # 5 |
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| Цитата
4th tier:
Interesting 'phones but ones that respond very little to simple modification-- that's why they're here. Most use the 55mm driver made by Peerless Mikrofon Bau, PMB, now known as MB Quart. I keep hoping someone will find the killer mod for these. I've been waiting four years.
Peerless PMB 100-- Best of this group. Two versions: Early version used a unique, damped PMB 55mm driver with extra, chamfered holes in a felt-filled chassis, and only HF member JadeEast owns one. Later version, which used a standard PMB 55mm driver in a hollow box chassis with absolutely no acoustic treatment, sounds wonderfully flat, though dry, from about 100 to 150 Hz on up. Below 150 Hz there be hippogryffes but not much bass, which will be found to have fallen off the edge of the map and lost in the shag. Strange Jecklin-design headset that promises much but delivers only a little. Some violently disagree with this, but I don't hear the spatial enhancements promised by the Jecklin open-frame architecture. And to me, the sacrifice of that much bass isn't worth it.
Telefunken TH 700-- Made by PMB in Germany using PMB's big 55mm pinch-type driver. Not much bass or treble.. and it's factory damped! Maybe with a LOTTA work...
B&O U70-- I'm a big industrial design freak, but enough is enough. A work of art first and always, and only secondarily a working headphone. The U70's driver doesn't improve significantly in a more sympathetic chassis. Uses the visually-same PMB driver as the TH 700. Top octave sliced off. Not much bass. It's at least easy to work on since its aluminum-clad plastic body snaps together.
RFT HOK80-2-- Made in East Germany, the old DDR. This phone and the next both use what appears to be the same 44mm East-German-made driver, believe it or not. The HOK has not much bass (very reminiscent of the PMB 100) and is very inefficient but decent mids and top end. Horrible earpads with a lifetime of about 2 years max, but still serviceable even after the seams have split. A very brave attempt considering the political and economic conditions of its birth. Historically significant and shows rare sensitivity to the driver type. Easily convertible to open-back, as if this were a feature planned by the designers. Will accept incredible amount of bass boost and will deliver real bass if you have the amp and EQ for it. Snap-together construction using sometimes brittle materials let some bass backwave leakage occur. Difficult to work on and not for everybody, but hard to ignore. Bass can be improved with dense, low-profile DIY earpads as demonstrated by a dedicated HF member, DefectiveAudioComponent, also known as DAC.
Goodmans OHP-10-- Very nice PMB-made (West German) headset with the East German drivers inside. The sound? well.. with flatter earpads and some better baffle seals... As it is, it doesn't sound as flat as the gnarly little HOK80-2! I seem to have the only pair on HF, and that's just as well.
5th tier:
Technics EAH-830-- Very innovative technically but with weak magnets and an uncomfortable, unnecessarily heavy headset and disappointingly blah sound.
RFT HOK80(v1)-- The first version of the HOK80. Interesting, but NO bass and very inefficient. What's there is surprisingly good, but...
Wildcards: I've only heard one of these myself, but they're tantalizing enough to mention them here, and we have some pretty thorough descriptions and mods going on the Big Thread.
Wharfedale Isodynamic(the original 1972 model, aka ID-1)-- I've heard a slightly modified (rear of driver sealed to back of cup) example and except for a big high-Q resonance in the upper bass, it's amazingly good, especially when you consider it was the first isodynamic headphone on the world market and sold for £20 (!!). Very rare in the US, much more common in the UK. Only one HFer owns one in good nick. Not surprisingly, he loves it. A notch filter would be a necessary accessory to live with it long term, but with that the Isodynamic shoots very close to the top. Very inefficient-- works best from speaker amps. Is it a "good-but"? More like a "great-but".
Wharfedale ID-2 / Leak 3000-- one member of the Euro Wing of orthodom does own these twins (which don't sound alike), and he better get busy and put his impressions up here. The drivers look similar to the ones in the Fostex T30 and T50. Not surprising, since Fostex licensed the technology from Rank, who bought up Wharfedale, Leak, and Strathearn.
Amfiton TDS-15 and Echo TDS-16 (early version)-- These tantalizing Russian (Ukraine) 'phones are owned by a couple of Euro HFers. The TDS-15 is approximately a Russian Fostex T50, with bar magnets and a serpentine voice coil but with unique features seen nowhere else. The TDS-16 is more like a YH-1 inside (perforated disc magnets, spiral voice coil) but the driver has clamps like a PMB and a flat, non-pleated diaphragm, not like a PMB. See the Big Thread for the owners' impressions.
Grundig GDHS-223 and 224-- One is a Fostex OEM with a T20v1 driver inside, the other uses an odd driver that we've seen nowhere else but looks a bit like the one in the PMB 100 v1, but with no clamps. One owner of the 224, one owner of the 223. Impressions and ongoing mods on the Big Thread.
Dual DK-720-- Again, one Euro owner, mods ongoing, looks promising. Has some features of the HOK 80 (!) but uses a low-tuned 55mm PMB driver.
Love the MUSIC, not equipment! High-end portable now has a simple solution: aleXmod+RE272
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Alex | Дата: Среда, 21.06.2017 | Сообщение # 6 |
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| Рецепт демпфирования YH100 от Tomek (head-fi):
Драйвер приклеивается к передней чашке. На торец драйвера и по периметру чашки наносится самоклеящийся битумный материал типа Вибропласта M2
По диаметру дрйвера (55мм) вырезается кольцо и наклеивается на драйвер сзади.
Вокруг драйвера (на переднюю крышку) наносится два слоя М2
Чтобы задняя чашка наушников была более ровной наклеиваем кольцо М2 и сзади.
Основной демпфирующий слой делается из ватного диска, в центр которого вставлен диск из стеклоткани.
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Alex | Дата: Среда, 21.06.2017 | Сообщение # 7 |
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Обрезаем ватные диски под имеющиеся крепежные выступы на задних чашках.
Распушаем конструкцию демпфера. При исходной толщине ваты в 4мм, у нас должно получиться 12-15 мм.
После помещения демпферов на место внутрь чашки убеждаемся что они не сплющились, это важно! Толщина должна составить 12-15мм.
Love the MUSIC, not equipment! High-end portable now has a simple solution: aleXmod+RE272
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Alex | Дата: Среда, 21.06.2017 | Сообщение # 8 |
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| Рецепт демпфирования от ludoo (head-fi):
Плотный фетр для демфирования крайних отверстий драйвера (серый цвет) Стоковый пролон (желтый) Тонкий плотный фетр (черный цвет) закрывает полностью чашку и еще один (меньшего размера) расположен прямо за драйвером)
Драйвер приклеен к передней крышке. В центр чашки в месте крепежа вложен ватный шарик.
Все демпфирующие слои за исключением финального кружка, располагающегося непосредственно за драйвером, уложены в чашку.
Данная схема демпфирования хорошо работает со стоковым кабелем, однако при его замене звук получается слегка ярковат. В этом случчае стоит поэкспериментировать с материалом круга, расположенного сразу за драйвером.
Еще одна версия демпфирования Tomek:
Детальный разбор (скан service manual):
Love the MUSIC, not equipment! High-end portable now has a simple solution: aleXmod+RE272
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Alex | Дата: Среда, 21.06.2017 | Сообщение # 9 |
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| Ну и до кучи немного замеров с альтернативного источника (Changstar.com)
АЧХ YH-100 (модифицированного в непонятной степени):
MLSSA YH-100:
Для сравнения MLSSA YH-1:
Замер Кг показывает что по искажениям YH-100 лучше чем YH-1:
Love the MUSIC, not equipment! High-end portable now has a simple solution: aleXmod+RE272
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Alex | Дата: Понедельник, 21.01.2019 | Сообщение # 10 |
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Love the MUSIC, not equipment! High-end portable now has a simple solution: aleXmod+RE272
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