Def Tech Def Tech Rarlab
Find great deals on eBay for definitive technology and definitive technology subwoofer. Shop with confidence. Definitive Technology Speakers - Opinions???? Def Tech was the first company to use built-in powered woofers in a tower speaker.
Award-winning high technology speakers. Founded in 1990, Definitive Technology is renowned for powerful, full-range sound. Psychedelic Visualization Media Player. Designed in California. Looking for an extractor for Rar files. Flowjo 10 Maccracken more. Computer Type PC/Desktop System Manufacturer/Model Number Home built i. K, Toshiba Satellite S5. A Laptop, MS Surface Pro 3.
Definitive Technology's Mythos sub/sat speaker system has everything that's required of a plasma-friendly setup. The speakers are tall, thin and designed as satellites, so their bass response is distinctly limited. Deliberately limited, too; controlling the bass output of the speakers by sending it to a sub is generally considered the best way of setting up a home cinema system. The Mythos system here comprises two £1,395 Mythos Four floor-standers, a pair of Mythos Two wall-mount speakers (£465 each), a £465 Mythos Three centre speaker and a £899 PowerField SuperCube II subwoofer. You need to look closely at the Mythos Two and Three, as they look virtually identical on cursory inspection. We would normally recommend putting the Mythos Fours at the front and the Mythos Two at the rear, but, if the setup is to be used with a plasma screen, it's probably best to stick the floor-standers at the rear. This is largely because the Mythos Twos are a better visual match for a wall-mounted screen, but also because the unique method of bass management recommended by Definitive Technology (more on this later) means the ever so slightly deeper bass of the Mythos Four is best used in the rear speaker role. Woody Allen Wav Files Software more.
Each speaker has its own hardware supplied - glass base plates in the case of the Mythos Fours, plates and wall brackets for the Twos and a mounting plate for the Four. There are even full-sized mounting cut-out templates supplied for the Twos and Threes, to make the lot of custom installers slightly less fraught.
And each speaker has the same gorgeous alloy finish, making it look like an ELAC sub/sat system for Cadillac Escalade drivers (that is what this system is, in a way). Aside from the narrow profile and profusion of driver units, the speakers are relatively conventional, single wired designs using a very similar drive unit configuration. All have a 25mm aluminium dome high-frequency unit, flanked either side by 115mm midrange units. These are bolstered by two additional 115mm pressure-driven (or passive radiating) drive units.
The only real differences between the speakers is cabinet volume and how the drive units are arranged. Speaker central The centre speaker's passive radiators are placed either side of the main trio of drive units, while in the Two and Four they are placed below the three units. The Four's bigger chamber helps to give the speaker more bass than the other two designs. Most of the bass is handled by the SuperCube II subwoofer. Powered by a whopping 1,250W power amp, this deceptively small sub contains no less than three 200mm bass units - one powered forwardfiring driver and two (on the left and right sides) driven passively as with the other speakers. This means the SuperCube delivers considerably more bass than any sub with a single 200mm driver. As we mentioned earlier, there's a slight departure from the norm in terms of bass management and how the subwoofer should be set up.