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The Duelund-Westminster External Crossover Project: Part 5 – Listening and Conclusions!

12-25-2013 | By Jeff Day |

It's Christmas morning here in the Americas. I've got a fire burning in the fireplace, a hot cup of good coffee in my hand, and I've got Northwest Public Radio playing a lot of really great Christmas themed material today through my vintage McIntosh MX110Z's vacuum tube tuner. Heaven.

117 MX110Z

At the moment NPR is playing an interview with 86 year-old guitarist Harold Bradley, one of the most recorded guitarists in the history of recording. The interview is focusing on his contribution to recordings from greats like Roy Orbison, Loretta Lynn, Elvis Presley, and Patsy Cline, for example, and what it was like to be a session player in those days. Harold even plays some licks of those albums on the same instruments he used for the album - awesome! It is a great piece of radio Americana and you should give it a listen if you can - Harold is a treasure!

Christmas Card Dad Mom Bob and Jeff

Let me take a moment to wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, for that matter let me wish you a Happy Everything, and may 2014 be your best year ever!

The card above is a Christmas card of my family from the 1950's. Left to right, that's my Dad, Jack (now 90!), my Mom, Jaine (now 88), my brother, Bobby (sadly deceased), and the little guy is me. Merry Christmas from the Day Clan everyone!

Silver CAST swap with Copper CAST

Santa brought the greatest Holiday Treat ever this year,  a pair of Silver Bells in the form of the Silver Duelund CAST 6.8uF paper-in-oil capacitors for the Duelund external crossovers of the mighty Tannoy Westminster Royal SE loudspeakers. As you know, Santa's real name is Frederik Carøe, the founder of Duelund Coherent Audio.

6.8 uF CAST Silver Caps silver & silk leads - back view

As you are about to read in the conclusion to the first part of the Duelund-WRSE Project, I was blown away by the improvement in performance to my Westminster Royal SE loudspeakers from the combination of the Duelund-WRSE external crossover plus the Panatela rewired WRSEs. For those of you who have duplicated the Duelund-WRSE Project with your own Tannoys, you know it's a huge deal for the performance enhancement those Duelund components brings to listening sessions - it's magic!

Continued from Part 4:

The Review System

During the time that I wrote the final listening impressions for this article, I used an EMT TSD-15 phono cartridge mounted on a VPI Classic turntable, with a restored vintage mint+ McIntosh MX110Z tuner-preamplifier from vintage vacuum-tube specialists Tom Manley and Terry DeWick in Knoxville, Tennessee.

117 MX110Z

The front-end electronics drove either my restored vintage mint McIntosh MC240 stereo 6L6GC vacuum tube amplifier, also from Tom Manley & Terry DeWick, or alternatively, my restored McIntosh MC30 mono amplifiers from Yves Beauvais at Vintage Vacuum Audio. My MC30 monos and MC240 stereo amp were placed on either Acoustic Revive RST-38 or TB-38 Quartz Under-Boards, and the RAF-48 Air Floating Board for isolation.

118 MC240

119 MC30 monos

 I have been using the superb Sablon Audio Panatela interconnects for my turntable to preamp, and preamp to phono stage connections. With the vintage McIntosh MX110Z’s RCA resident in my system, I was able to use a 1-meter length of Panatela interconnects from my VPI Classic turntable to the MX110Z, and a 1.5-meter length of Panatela interconnects from the MX110Z to my McIntosh amplifiers. From my McIntosh amplifiers I used a 1-meter set of Panatela component speaker cables to the Duelund CAST external crossovers, and an 8-feet pair of Panatela component speaker cables from the Duelund CAST external crossovers to the Westminster Royal SEs’ Dual Concentric™ driver connections, which gave me an all Panatela cable set from source to loudspeaker drivers.

120 Panatela ICs

I used an Acoustic Revive Power Reference AC power cord to connect my VPI Classic turntable to the Acoustic Revive RPT-4 Ultimate Power Distributor. My vintage McIntosh electronics all have captive power cords, which were plugged into the Acoustic Revive RPT-4 Ultimate Power Distributor, which in turn was plugged into my wall outlet via an Acoustic Revive Power Reference AC power cord. I used the superb combination of an Acoustic Revive CB-1DB receptacle base plate, CFRP-1F carbon fiber outlet plate, CS-F2 Outlet Stabilizer, and an Oyaide R-0 receptacle installed into my wall outlet, to power my system.

121 outlet

Listening Impressions

The Stock Westminster Royale SE Loudspeakers

To put everything in context, let’s take a little trip back in time to when I first wrote about the Westminster Royal SEs in Issue 49 of Positive Feedback Online, to get a feel for what a stock pair of Westminsters sound like:

“I get quite a few people asking me what the Westminster Royal SEs sound like, so I'll start with a very general description, and try to elaborate from there. First of all, as you would expect from their size, they sound big. Big in the way music sounds live, and if you closed your eyes for a moment, you could be forgiven for thinking that the music coming through them is coming from musicians playing live, that you're hearing them through a very refined sound system, although I doubt there's many venues where the music sounds as good as when coming through the Westminsters. The Westminster's presentation of recorded music is energizing, life-size, and powerfully moving, much in the same way live music is.

As I've mentioned earlier, the Westminster's overall sonic character is largely determined by the way you've voiced them in your room via your equipment choices. I've chosen associated equipment that makes them sound just a little bit dark and warm overall, with high frequencies that sparkle like starlight through a pitch black night, and with deep, taut, and articulate bass response.  The Westminsters voiced thusly have a big, richly colorful tone, and a very natural presentation that is surprisingly agile and transparent, not something I would have expected from a big 15-inch driver.

122 stock WRSE

Perhaps the Westminster Royal SE's most notable attribute is how visceral the musical experience is through them. You can literally feel the sound waves of the music flow over and interact with your body in a way that is uniquely tangible compared to any loudspeaker in my experience. The most vivid example of this is the bass response, which can quite literally rattle your ribs in your chest. But the effect is not limited to bass, it's pretty much that way across the frequency range, where I can feel it energizing my body much in the same way live instruments do, and more than one visitor to my listening room has commented on how involving this phenomena is.

Another aspect of the Westminster's overall presentation, at least when setup like I've described above, is that they can play at very loud levels without my ears shutting down. I'm not sure if it is their very low distortion, the point-source-like delivery of the Dual Concentric™ drivers, or the enormous wave front that washes over you during listening, but I've found that they defeat that 'strained' feeling I normally get as volumes increase, which allows for listening at higher levels than I am used to with other loudspeakers.”

To close the review in Issue 49, I wrote: “As my friend Ron said after hearing the Westminsters, "Where do you go from here!"”

The Westminster Royal SE Loudspeakers with the Duelund CAST Crossovers

Well, I had never intended to go anywhere else loudspeaker-wise, as I have been thrilled with performance of my stock pair of Tannoy Westminster Royal SEs, but now in response to Ron’s statement, I can say that where you go from a pair of stock Westminsters is here, to a pair of Duelund CAST external crossovers. The Duelund CAST external crossovers take the already amazing Westminster Royal SE loudspeakers to astonishing new heights! Everything I love about my Westminsters just got better!

123 WRSE with Duelund XOs

My first impressions during the early project phases were “Oh my God – what a difference!” and that is even more true of the completed project. In one word – breathtaking!

All of those attributes I love and have described about the voicing of my stock Tannoy Westminster Royal SEs remained intact, but they have been enhanced to a remarkable degree, and new revelations in performance have presented themselves.

Let me reiterate again how much quieter the background levels of my Westminsters are now with no music playing, due to the Duelund CAST external crossovers. All I can say is that I am floored by the noise level difference between the two crossovers, with the Duelund CAST external crossover being so preternaturally quiet. The reduced noise level that results from Frederik & Magnus’ choice of materials, and the resonance control of the CAST process, works amazingly well – it’s an ear-opener for sure!

The Duelund CAST crossovers provide a massive increase in the sense of recorded space and room ambience, which no doubt the Duelund CAST Air Core inductors make a large contribution to. While people often assume that ambience and a sense of space are related to the high frequencies, it is actually at the opposite end of the spectrum – the low frequencies – that the primary contribution occurs. Movement of air in a room occurs at very low frequencies, and the more a loudspeaker allows that natural low frequency ‘breathing’ information to come through unscathed, the more sense of ambience and space you will experience from your recordings.

124 Ray Brown Soular Energy

Take the Analogue Productions 45 RPM reissue of The Ray Brown Trio’s Soular Energy as an example, where the Trio is immersed in a huge sense of ambient space of the recording, and Ray Brown’s bass becomes particularly amazing to listen to because it is so easy to discern all the pitch changes, with all the vibrant textures that make up its timbral signature, and all of Ray’s amazing touch on the strings. The clarity and resolution the Duelund CAST crossovers brought to the low frequencies was truly impressive, whether it was the big lush sense of space on the recording, or an articulation of low-frequency musical information – like with Ray Brown’s bass playing – made me a real believer in the effectiveness of the Duelund CAST Air Core inductors for the low frequencies.

The Duelund CAST crossovers also produced a dramatic increase in transparency, yet the uncanny thing about that transparency was how natural it all sounded. Take for example the box set of the Bayreuth Festival recordings from 1955 by Decca/Testament of Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring Cycle). The Duelund CAST crossovers natural sounding transparency made these large-scale opera recordings sound as intimate and personal as The Ray Brown Trio’s Soular Energy, by putting the performers, the musicians – as considerably far back into the recording as you could hear them – right before your ears in the listening room. The effect of this transparency was an immediacy that had me so engrossed in the music that I couldn’t believe how soon it was I had to get up and flip a record over as I worked my way through the box set.

125 Der Ring des Nibelungen

Right on the heels of their extraordinary transparency, was the ability of the Duelund CAST crossovers to resolve tons of natural detail, and I was constantly surprised by hearing new information in familiar recordings, and subtle but important details that had just never been audible with my stock crossovers. I found this to be particularly flattering to classical music, where its natural complexity and artistry becomes even more apparent and gripping during listening sessions. Take for an example a set of recordings that I am still getting familiar with, Der Ring des Nibelungen, the abundance of natural detail was spell binding and really added to my listening excitement, and I found myself transfixed hearing the interplay of multiple voices with all the different instruments of the orchestra.

I also noticed on with the Duelund CAST crossovers that there was less sense of strain on dynamic peaks, and the dynamic contrasts across the dynamic range from softest to loudest were more discernable. Dynamic transitions to crescendos, decrescendos or diminuendos became revelatory with the Duelund CAST crossovers.

126 RLJ Pop Pop

Take for example the superb Rickie Lee Jones album Pop Pop, where there are a couple of Rickie’s vocal peaks on the recording that my stock Westminster Royal SE crossovers rendered a bit ‘shouty’. In fact, Pop Pop probably would have benefited from the judicious use of a vintage tube Teletronix LA2a compressor like Steve Hoffman and Kevin Gray used on the Nat “King” Cole mixes they did from a few years back, that gently compressed the “out of the park” overs that can cause some problems for most systems. Or at least that’s what I thought until I listened to Pop Pop with the Duelund CAST crossovers, and those troublesome vocal peaks on Pop Pop just disappeared! The music was even more dynamic but now there was zero strain on those vocal peaks with the Duelund CAST crossovers.

With the Duelund CAST crossovers, particularly on good recordings, until an instrument comes in, I kept thinking I forgot to turn up the volume because it was so quiet, and then magically an instrument or voice fills the room with music. A case in point was the Analogue Productions 45 RPM reissue of The Gil Evans Orchestra’s Out Of The Cool, which got me good to drive home the point. When the song La Nevada starts the background was so quiet I wondered if I had forgot to turn the volume up. Then out of utter silence comes Gil Evans on piano – it was startling. You hear this big ambient sense of space that surrounds Evans, and it seems like he’s the only one in the room, then Elvin Jones playing rhythm on shakers materializes out of nowhere. Then Ron Carter on bass comes teleporting in like magic, and then Ray Crawford emerges on guitar, and so forth. This magic act of instruments appearing out of a silent background really creates a sense of drama in the music.

127 Gil Evans Out of the Cool

With the Duelund CAST crossovers the soundstage really opened up with something like double the depth, more height, and a very distinct layering of images back into the recesses of the soundstage as far as I could hear. The images on Out of the Cool were solid and naturally presented, with a huge sense of ambience and space around them. While the stock Tannoy crossover was quite good, compared to the Duelund CAST crossover it sounded two-dimensional and opaque in comparison. The pinpoint imaging on Out of the Cool is really impressive, and the layers upon layers of images from left to right and front to back in the soundstage was absolutely stunning.

The presentation of the music was also much more natural and relaxed sounding with the Duelund CAST crossovers, and it felt more like music, if you understand what I mean. There are times that the horns on Out of the Cool were so compelling expressive you’d think they were human voices! The same thing was true of The Ray Brown Trio’s Soular Energy, where the natural and relaxed presentation that was transparent and full of detail just drew me into the musical performance. The same was true of Der Ring des Nibelungen, where before the Duelund CAST experience I didn’t really care for Wagner all that much, and now I was absolutely transfixed by the experience that is Der Ring des Nibelungen!

Up until now I’ve been mainly describing how the Duelund CAST crossovers perform on the classic audiophile parameters of resolution, transparency, soundstaging, soundspace, and imaging, which are the non-musical artifacts of the recording process that we all know and love. Now lets shift gears a little bit and talk about how well the Duelund CAST crossovers perform on the musical content of recordings, and how well they help create that emotional link to the music that forges the foundation of musicality.

In considering what the Duelund CAST crossovers did for my Westminsters’ musicality (one of the Westminsters’ strengths), I am reminded of Don Gold’s cover statements from the Shelly Manne/Bill Evans/Monty Budwig album Empathy, where he says of Evans “Evans himself is not concerned with meticulous analysis of his music. He equates Zen and jazz as forces in his life; explaining either to anyone, he feels, deflates the experience. As he told Don Nelsen (Down Beat, Dec. 8, 1960), “It’s got to be experienced, because it’s feeling, not words. Words are the children of reason and, therefore, can’t explain it … that’s why it bugs me when people try to analyze jazz as an intellectual theorem. It’s not. It’s feeling.”

128 Manne & Evans Empathy

So the Duelund CAST crossovers’ presentation of the music does feel more like music than my stock crossovers did, and I think this was due to more of everything coming through: more audiophile-style sonics, for example, but more importantly more of those things that make music seem more live-like, those musical attributes that engage us as listeners more in the way live music does: convincing dynamics for one; realistic timbre and tone color for another; melodies, rhythm, and harmonies that feel like the real thing are another; and the ability to play at live-like levels strain free is important too.

When listening to Empathy the Duelund CAST crossovers let another level of musical information come through in terms of shades of tonal colors, the presentation of musically natural timbral detail, and important and relevant sonic & musical details that give a tactile feel of what the musicians are doing, all of this helps infuse the music with feeling.

129 Rolling Stones Hot Rocks

The Duelund CAST crossovers could also play louder without harshness than my stock crossovers. I suspect a lot of this had to do with the CAST process damping down distortion for a purer, lower distortion listening experience. With familiar recordings, like the Rolling Stones’ Hot Rocks 1964-1971, the volume where my ears would normally start to shut down with the stock Tannoy crossovers, my ears were unfazed and relaxed with the Duelund CAST crossovers. I think the ability to play loud is important, because some music – like rock & roll – demands to be played loud to really get a realistic experience of what the musicians’ intended for you to hear.

One revelation that occurred with the addition of the Duelund CAST crossovers was the rather dramatic increase in intelligibility (for lack of a better word) of tonal colors. I was particularly impressed by how much more the Duelund CAST crossovers informed me about the chordal tone color choices used by musicians in different musical styles. As long time readers will recognize, I have often stressed the importance of a component’s ability to realistically convey tone color, as tone color is one of the more important aspects of creating an emotional connection to the music for a particular musical style.

The Duelund CAST crossovers brought an enhanced ability to my Westminster Royal SE loudspeakers to distinguish and express the tonal colors of music (those alterations of a three-note triad you get by adding additional pitches, as with the major & minor 6ths, major & minor 7ths, dominant 7ths with flat or sharp fives or nines, major & minor & dominant 9ths, 11th, augmented 11th, 13th, etc.), that give life and meaning to the different styles of music and the emotional connections that go with them.

The ability of a component to distinguish and present realistic tonal color is important because different musical styles are stylistically defined by groupings of tone colors that creates much of the ‘musical feel’ for that particular style of music, which helps musicians craft a certain musical message and emotive feel to go with the music.

After listening to the Duelund CAST crossovers, I have realized in retrospect that many components blur, homogenize, bleach, or alter tone colors in ways that diminish the emotional connection to the music, and a lot more than I realized. This aspect of the Duelund CAST crossovers caught me a little bit by surprise and caused me to really pay attention, realizing that the better a component reproduces those tone color aspects of the musical fabric – and the Duelund CAST components do this to a revelatory degree – the better the intended musical message from the artist gets through to you, the listener.

Let me elaborate for with some examples to see if I can explain this performance attribute a little more completely, and why I think it’s so important. This enhanced ‘tone color’ resolution that the Duelund CAST crossovers are capable of is, by way of analogy, a little bit like the resolution of individual instruments in an orchestra. If you don’t have much resolution when listening to an orchestra you get sort of a homogenous overall sound of all the instruments, which can be enjoyable. However, when you can hear the timbral contribution of all the individual instruments and can pick them out of the recording, orchestral music goes to a new level of engagement that is more emotionally gripping and exciting as you hear their contributions to the fabric of the music.

130 Will the Circle Be Unbroken

To start with lets take simple forms of folk music, where the tone color focus is around the sound of major and minor triads, like some of those from the Will the Circle Be Unbroken album.

As a musician, maybe you will want to add in an emotive feeling of longing for lost love on a particular song, so then you might add in a major 7th color tone, as some Celtic folk tunes do.

Or maybe you are feeling down and out because of your troubles and sorrows due to that cheatin’ mean woman you love, so you want to add in some blue notes (Eb, F#, Bb) to your folk major and minor triads, and voilà, the blues emerge, so now so you can sing your blues along with Muddy Waters’ Folk Singer for a while.

131 Muddy Waters Folk Singer

After singing the blues for a while because of that mean woman you love, you decide to add in some suspended 4th tone color as you seek help from a higher power while singing some gospel music.

Now you are feeling better and are ready to give the good life another go, to strut your stuff, so you change your lyrics and move the beat of the music from two & four to one & three, and play some rock & roll along with the Rolling Stones! Yeah baby!

Maybe you are feeling like getting tonally complex and exploring a little jazz with a major 7th, or adding in a flat five for a little bebop, or adding in a softer Latin tone color with a major 9th so you can play The Girl from Ipanema along with Jobim.

132 Getz - Gilberto

Well you get the idea, there’s a reason certain styles of music sound the way they do, and an important part of that has to do with tone colors. While I never fully realized it before the Duelund CAST crossovers made it strikingly apparent, there is a major difference between components abilities as far as ‘tone color resolution’ is concerned, and it turns out that those resolved variations in tone color are very important to experiencing the full emotive impact from the music you’re listening to.

This ‘tone color resolution’ that the Duelund CAST components do so easily is probably something you’re going to have to experience for yourself to fully appreciate, and I find it is hard to articulate, as it is one of those aspects of the music listening experience that is as much felt as heard.  The Duelund CAST crossovers have an uncanny ability to successfully portray the subtleties in tonal colors, and their more realistic presentation makes for more of an emotional and artistic connection to the music. This is new territory: I think the Duelund CAST crossovers ‘tone color resolution’ does a superb job of delivering natural and realistic tone colors for a tonally rich and colorful listening experience, that once heard will have you listening to music so you can feel it over and over. Ok, let’s move on.

One vintage record I’ve been listening to a lot lately is The Guitar World of Johnny Smith that my friend Joan LaChapelle let me borrow. The cover notes say “The Guitar World of Johnny Smith” is rich in color, mood and emotion … charged with the rhythm of Smith’s beat …” and man oh man, it’s so true. I love jazz guitar music, and I really enjoy the timbre of those archtop jazz guitars, it just sends shivers down my spine! The Duelund CAST crossover makes the timbre - the unique ‘voice’ of the instrument - come to life before my ears in tone and texture, making it so real and present. This realistic portrayal of timbre lets Smith’s full tone color develop, which I think helps lend a feeling of beauty and expressiveness to his music that the album cover notes so rightly mention.

133 Johnny Smith

On The Guitar World of Johnny Smith the way Smith improvises on the melody (the tune you ‘whistle while you work’) is absolutely captivating, and I got a real feel for his touch upon the strings, and the incredible sense of rhythm (the steady beat that determines the tempo) he infuses his playing with. This album has a lot of different tempos across the songs. The Duelund CAST crossovers really deliver the melody, rhythm, and tempos on this album in realistic fashion, which made for a richly engaging sense of mood and emotion that really allowed the listening experience to bloom and captivate my attention.

Song after song, album after album, my initial positive impressions of the Duelund CAST crossovers were continually reinforced, and over time I became even more impressed with their musical prowess and their remarkable ability to provide beyond state of the art sonics, musicality, and an emotional connection that just left me speechless.

Bill Evans was definitely right, there are some art forms – like the Duelund CAST components – that mere words can’t do justice to: “It’s got to be experienced, because it’s feeling, not words. Words are the children of reason and, therefore, can’t explain it … It’s feeling.”

Summary & Conclusions

For those of you who were not yet familiar with Duelund Coherent Audio, whether you are an enthusiast or a loudspeaker manufacturer, I hope that this article has given you a good introduction to the Duelund CAST capacitors, inductors, and resistors, as well as given you a sense of the rather dramatic performance improvement they can offer to audio reproduction.

In their quest for attaining audio perfection, Frederik Carøe and Magnus F. Pedersen, the principals of Duelund Coherent Audio, have accomplished something amazing and inspiring with their handcrafted Duelund CAST components, and I think that their friend and mentor, Steen Duelund, would be excited and proud to behold what they have accomplished. I certainly am in awe of what they have done with the Duelund CAST components!

I was very impressed that Frederik & Magnus developed the innovative CAST Mylar 200uF capacitor specifically for the low-frequency crossovers of the WRSEs just for this project. This suggests to me that if you have a custom component need for one of your own audio projects or applications, you should definitely talk to Frederik & Magnus to find out what innovative solutions they might propose, and like me, you may very well be amazed at the result.

The Duelund Coherent Audio / Tannoy Westminster Royal Special Edition Project was a resounding success. Designing and building the pair of external crossovers for my Westminster Royal SE loudspeakers using the ultra-premium Duelund Coherent Audio CAST capacitors, inductors, and resistors was an audio adventure that I’ll never forget, and the performance enhancement to my Westminster Royal SE loudspeakers was absolutely spectacular!

134 WRSE with Duelund XO

When you look at the Duelund CAST components with their impressive fit and finish, then hold them in your hands and feel their impressive mass, and then think about the no compromise approach and ultra quality of materials used in their creation, its hard not to be impressed.

The Duelund CAST components are amazing, not only for what they are intrinsically – each one being a work of art unto itself – but also for the transformative power they had on the music playing ability of my Westminster Royal SE loudspeakers.

In virtually every aspect of reproduced sound, the choice of components in crossovers matters a lot more than I had realized, from transparency in the high and low frequencies (all the CAST components), for a sense of space and articulation in the bass region (Frederik was right on when he said the CAST air core inductors make a big difference!), oodles of natural detail (all the CAST components), and an extremely quiet background (all the CAST components).

135 Duelund XO components

I was extremely impressed with the astonishingly quiet nature of the Duelund CAST external crossovers compared to my stock internal crossovers, which allowed music full of color and life to emerge from a preternatural background quietness to give a thrilling revelation of musical presence.

The purity of sound through the Duelund CAST crossovers gave me real dividends in terms of musical nuance, low-level dynamics, natural timbral textures, and vivid chordal tonal colors that made the music breathe with life and emotion during listening sessions, and gave me some truly revelatory new insights into my music that I had not been completely aware of before (like the afore mentioned ‘tone color resolution’).

136 Duelund XO closeup

It is truly hard to find the words to fully express what these Duelund components are capable of, in their sonic and musical prowess, and in the emotional power they unleash in the music. I suspect to fully understand what I’m talking about you’re going to want to feel the power of Duelund CAST components for yourself, for they are alive with the glory of music!

Whether you have a pair of Tannoy Westminster Royal SEs that you want to take to the next level, or perhaps Canterbury SEs, or another loudspeaker altogether, yes, yes, the Duelund CAST components are most highly recommended!

The Cast of the Duelund-WRSE Project

I would like to offer my sincerest thanks to everyone involved in making the Duelund-WRSE Project a reality, for without their contributions of materials, guidance, and encouragement, this remarkable project would not have been possible.

Frederik Carøe (Duelund Coherent Audio, Denmark): I would like to offer an immense “Thank you!” to Frederik Carøe for his immense support in providing the remarkable collection of Duelund Coherent Audio CAST capacitors, inductors, and resistors for The Project. Steen Duelund and The Doctor are smiling.

Mark Coles (Sablon Audio, England, UK): I would like to offer my sincerest thanks to Mark Coles for introducing me to Frederik, his many good ideas for rewiring the Westminsters, and contributing his amazing Panatela cables to The Project.

Dr. Paul Mills (Tannoy, Scotland, UK): I would like to thank Paul Mills for his patience in answering my many questions about the WRSE crossovers, about how best to proceed with various aspects of The Project, and for providing a pair of Tannoy autotransformers for use in The Project.

David Biancosino (Dave Biancosino, Answers in Art, Washington State, USA): Many thanks to my friend Dave for rolling up his sleeves and going into his woodshop to create the tone wood isolation bases from scratch used for the Duelund CAST external crossovers – totally awesome!

Pete Riggle (Pete Riggle Audio Engineering, Washington State, USA): Many thanks to Pete Riggle for helping me do the layout for a breadboard crossover to get the balling rolling, and to Stephaen Harrell for bringing over some fine victuals from the El Fat Cat Grill to support the effort! You guys are awesome!

Jeff Day (Positive Feedback Online, Washington State, USA): I guess I should add in yours truly, for contributing my pair of Tannoy Westminster Royal SE loudspeakers, for funding miscellaneous materials, and managing The Project to a successful conclusion!

What’s Next?

In the future I plan to report back on further impressions about the Duelund CAST crossovers as I get more time in on them, as I suspect they’re not even fully run-in yet. I have wanted to do a little judicious conditioning of the Duelund CAST components on my Audiodharma conditioning device to help run them in a little more, but time constraints hasn’t allowed for it.

Also, as I mentioned earlier, the nice people at the Soundcoat Company who provide specialized noise control solutions to aerospace, medical, and industrial applications, have been working with me to integrate some of their cutting edge vibration-control materials into the Duelund-WRSE Project isolation stands in a number of clever and easily applied ways, both by providing vibration reduction materials for the entire stand, as well as for each of the Duelund components mounted upon them.

Perhaps the most exciting development of all is that Frederik has just told me that he has a little surprise for me to try in the future!

These are exciting times - stay tuned for all things Duelund!

Jeff Day

Duelund Coherent Audio products are available through Parts Connexion in North America.

To find out about the availability of Duelund Coherent Audio components in other parts of the world please consult the Duelund Coherent Audio website, and if you want to inquire about special applications or custom orders for specific projects you can contact Frederik Carøe directly for more information.

***

As I am sure you can tell, the article I wrote for Positive Feedback Online in Issue 70 about the Duelund-WRSE Project was a major undertaking, and ended up having 42 pages of text and 137 photos. It was the most ambitious feature article I have ever written, and the result positively thrills me! I hope you have enjoyed reading the article, and I know that those of you who have duplicated the project with your Canterburys and Westminster Royals have been as thrilled with the outcome as I am. Keep those reports on your results coming in!

Since I wrote the article for Issue 70, the Duelund-WRSE crossovers have continued to make gains in performance as they have gotten more time on them. Their overall character has remained the same, but everything is getting better over time, which is pretty amazing considering how incredibly good they are cold out of the box. I still haven't had time to do any conditioning of the individual components on my Cable Cooker like I had planned, but I'm not really in a big hurry given how great everything is sounding. Eventually I will do that and report on the results.

6.8 uF CAST Silver Caps

I'm not sure I should even tell you any details about this yet, so consider this to be a sneak peek into a future dedicated article at Positive Feedback Online about the Duelund Silver CAST PIO Capacitors (and of course I'll keep slipping in a few short reports here too):

The Silver Duelund CAST 6.8uF paper-in-oil capacitors are simply amazing! Who would have thought that two capacitors could have such a profound influence on the performance of my system. Having listened to my Hi-Fi rig for a while now with the Silvers in the circuit, I think I can safely say that those two Silver CAST capacitors have made as large a difference in the performance of my system as the entire Duelund external crossover has, including the rewiring of the WRSEs with the superb Sablon Audio Panatela cabling from Mark Coles.

6.8 uF CAST Silver Caps silver & silk leads - another view

The Silvers are a really, really, big deal! In thinking about it, I've concluded that the Silvers should make as much difference in the performance as the Duelund external crossovers plus the Panatela cabling, as the price for two 6.8uF Duelund Silver CAST PIO Capacitors is almost equivalent to the entire cost of the Duelund-WRSE Project! Yes, they are spendy - $7500 Euros each. Gasp!

Right now I'm going through and listening to the same albums I wrote about during the article above, and it has been some amazing listening! Stay tuned for developments in this continuing story!

From my home to yours, Happy Everything! May the music playing in your home make your Holiday Season a Joy! 🙂

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