DS21
Head-Fier
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2004
- Posts
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- 12
I recently picked up a pair of AKG K550's for my office, to give me better isolation than my previous office cans (Denon D2000) and also because I've grown tired of the D2000's unipivot working its way loose. I use them with a HeadRoom Micro Amp with "home" electronics module, because it's a good-looking piece of equipment and I find crossfeed a big sonic advantage.
Overall, they're pretty decent. Obviously, their balanced-dome drivers aren't going to move as much air as the Denons' edge-suspended cone down low. But they also have some sonically deleterious midrange and treble resonances. I've found that often such resonances come not from the driver, but from cabinet resonances, even in tweeters. Often, damping the cabinet can reduce or even resolve such things. It works in midrange/wideband cabinets, and even in tweeters.*
I opened my K550's (the earpad just pulls off, and the cabinet comes apart with five small Philips-head screws), and found two relevant things:
1) The inner cabinet is bifurcated, with a rubber subchamber for the driver's vented pole piece to feed into, and then an outer cabinet for the diaphragm.
2) There is no damping material in either subchamber .
I didn't take a picture of the opened cabinet, but here's Tyll Hertsen's pic of the right earcup (the left has more wires, and a PCB to distribute the man cable to the lead wires for each earcup:

Source: http://www.innerfidelity.com/content/wonderfully-competent-akg-k550-sealed-headphone
My favorite material for damping cabinets is Bonded Logic Ultratouch, which is recycled denim insulation, and available online from Home Depot.** It is more-or-less an acoustic clone of fiberglass, but doesn't irritate the skin or lungs. (It is quite a bit more expensive than fiberglass insulation, true, but while that might be an issue when insulating an attic, it's a minimal difference when filling a speaker cabinet.) So, I popped open the cabinet and put a tuft of the BLU in the polepiece subchamber, and a loose fill in the outer chamber. My postal scale doesn't have adequate resolution at these fill levels, but here's what the right cup looks like:

Anyone else tried anything similar? Thoughts?
*See, e.g., the Larry Van Wormer mods for the Vifa [now ScanSpeak Discovery] D27-series tweeters, http://www.raylectronics.nl/pdfs/Modifying_Vifa_tweeter.pdf
**http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=202709974&storeId=10051&langId=-1&catalogId=10053&ci_sku=202709974&ci_kw=%7bkeyword%7d&kwd=%7bkeyword%7d&cm_mmc=shopping%2d%5f%2dgoogleads%2d%5f%2dpla%2d%5f%2d202709974&ci_gpa=pla#.USkGDqWNRmI
Overall, they're pretty decent. Obviously, their balanced-dome drivers aren't going to move as much air as the Denons' edge-suspended cone down low. But they also have some sonically deleterious midrange and treble resonances. I've found that often such resonances come not from the driver, but from cabinet resonances, even in tweeters. Often, damping the cabinet can reduce or even resolve such things. It works in midrange/wideband cabinets, and even in tweeters.*
I opened my K550's (the earpad just pulls off, and the cabinet comes apart with five small Philips-head screws), and found two relevant things:
1) The inner cabinet is bifurcated, with a rubber subchamber for the driver's vented pole piece to feed into, and then an outer cabinet for the diaphragm.
2) There is no damping material in either subchamber .
I didn't take a picture of the opened cabinet, but here's Tyll Hertsen's pic of the right earcup (the left has more wires, and a PCB to distribute the man cable to the lead wires for each earcup:
Source: http://www.innerfidelity.com/content/wonderfully-competent-akg-k550-sealed-headphone
My favorite material for damping cabinets is Bonded Logic Ultratouch, which is recycled denim insulation, and available online from Home Depot.** It is more-or-less an acoustic clone of fiberglass, but doesn't irritate the skin or lungs. (It is quite a bit more expensive than fiberglass insulation, true, but while that might be an issue when insulating an attic, it's a minimal difference when filling a speaker cabinet.) So, I popped open the cabinet and put a tuft of the BLU in the polepiece subchamber, and a loose fill in the outer chamber. My postal scale doesn't have adequate resolution at these fill levels, but here's what the right cup looks like:
Anyone else tried anything similar? Thoughts?
*See, e.g., the Larry Van Wormer mods for the Vifa [now ScanSpeak Discovery] D27-series tweeters, http://www.raylectronics.nl/pdfs/Modifying_Vifa_tweeter.pdf
**http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=202709974&storeId=10051&langId=-1&catalogId=10053&ci_sku=202709974&ci_kw=%7bkeyword%7d&kwd=%7bkeyword%7d&cm_mmc=shopping%2d%5f%2dgoogleads%2d%5f%2dpla%2d%5f%2d202709974&ci_gpa=pla#.USkGDqWNRmI