ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
Hi all, my first post here. I have just purchased a pair of P45’s. I was able to listen to them before I put down my cash and they sounded great. That combined with the reputation they seemed to have, I thought they would be well worth the modest asking price. Aesthetically, they’re in great condition for their age especially the grills, they are pristine. Having gotten them home and hooked up to my system, I’m feeling a little underwhelmed, however. Although, they are very smooth, they just seem a little lifeless and to be honest, plasticy. I know they are quite old speakers and may need a little TLC to bring them back to life so I cracked them open and had a bit of a look inside. Please bare with me I have a lot of questions and I’m somewhat new to the technical aspects of speaker design and maintenance. I’ve included lots of photos too.
As I said maybe with a bit of work I can get my P45s sounding great. Maybe it’s just my expectations that need adjusting. Anyhow, any help or thoughts would be much appreciated.
Thanks!
Phil
As for the more technical issues such as capacitors, dampening foam, terminal removal you'll need to hear from the experts here, but it is strange that they sounded great at the seller's place but not at your place. I imagine there might be a few reasons: maybe they are connected out of phase, or perhaps your amplifier is the culprit? As for the woofers, if they are working when driven and the cone moves smoothly without any rubbing when pressed gently then probably they are OK.
If you build them tightly into a shelf then - perhaps I am wrong - the whole setup can become boomy, as you will have some resonance from the shelf, especially if you leave space behind them.
I have a pair of P45's hung on a wall and I can say they are excellent indeed, and look fabulous.
Thanks, they do look great as do mine, although I probably would have preferred the wood grain veneer rather than white, but I can live with that.
TBH, I probably rushed my audition with them.They did seem to sound really good at the time. They were just sat on the floor and connected to some sort of older style amp. I didn't pay that much attention but it looked like a fairly standard 70s or 80s amp. My test at home was on my brand new Yamaha RX-v683 set up as 2.0, so probably very different and would no doubt account for at least a different sound. Maybe they just not a great match. I had them sat on top of my very large floor standers right up against the wall to try to simulate as much possible their intended positioning.
The P45's are intended to be connected to another yet to be purchased amp in another room of the house that I'm building. The intention is that will will be another yamaha because of the musiccast feature, although only a stereo one.
As far as placement, as I said, the cabinet will be custom built in the new house, so It can be however I like, so perhaps they can hang on a false back with a bit of space around them? Plenty of time to work that out though.
The synergy between modern and vintage is not always perfect, as far as I know. I myself am using exclusively vintage equipment, so can't comment much on this. Perhaps changing the capacitors might help. Martin (Dillen) should be able to help you with this. One last easy thing to check, if haven't done it already, is that modern often amps have a speaker impedance setting and the P45s are 4Ohm so it is best to check the amp is putting out the correct amount of current.