Owners Manual For The Silverscreen HD Loudspeaker System
Table of Contents Registration Owners Record The Cabinetry / Our Commitment Warranty Setup Unpacking Your Speakers Speaker Placement Hooking Up Cables Amplification Speaker Connections Fine Tuning Page 3 4 5 6 7 8-9 10-12 13 14 Technology Specifications 15 2
Owners Record The serial number is located on the rear of the unit. Record this number in the space provided below. Refer to this when calling your dealer regarding this product. Model: Silverscreen HD Serial No: _________________________ Date of purchase: ___________________ Thank you for selecting a Legacy Loudspeaker System. These handcrafted instruments will provide you with many years of listening enjoyment.
The Cabinetry / Our Commitment Handcrafted Beneath the surface of Silverscreen HD’s elegant exterior lies rigid MDF construction. Interlocking joinery maximizes the strength of the cabinet parts. Polyester fiberfill is selected for internal damping. A sharp rap on the enclosure will leave you with little more than bruised knuckles. Each cabinet is impeccably finished on all exposed surfaces with select veneers.
Warranty Legacy Audio supports its customers and products with pride. We cheerfully warrant our loudspeaker products we manufacture from defects in materials and workmanship for a period of seven (7) years. Electronic components such as internal amplifiers and digital processors are covered for three (3)years. Please register your product with Legacy Audio. Should you require service Legacy will require a proof of purchase in order to honor the warranty - so please keep your receipt.
Unpacking Your Speakers Your new speaker system has been very carefully packaged to insure that it travels to you safely. Each speaker is protected by a doublewall outer carton with heavy V-board corner protectors. Molded foam end caps are used to protect the elegant cabinetry, and a plastic liner is provided as waterproofing. Please save this packing for future transportation. If cartons become damaged or misplaced, new ones can be purchased from Legacy Audio.
Speaker Placement To allow more flexibility in seating arrangements, your Legacy loudspeaker is designed for broad lateral coverage. Optimal listener position is actually about 5 to 15 degrees off of the axis normal to the loudspeaker baffle (approximately 4-5’ off the floor). Your Legacy speaker is optimized for a flat response in the far field. Placing the loudspeaker or the listener near a room boundary will generally increase low frequency impact.
Hooking Up Cables The ideal conductor would have negligible resistance, inductance and capacitance. The table below shows how a few actual speaker cables measure up. Cable 12 ga. 14 ga. 16 ga. 18 ga. Ωs/ft 0.0033 0.0048 0.0079 0.0128 pF/ft 24 17 16 28 µH/ft 0.21 0.13 0.18 0.21 Capacitance is considered insignificant in each cable because its effect is well out of the audio bandwidth; inductance can be decreased (at the expense of increased capacitance) by keeping the conductor pair closely spaced.
Hooking Up Cables What about phase shift due to frequency dependent travel times down the speaker cable? Measurements show that 100 Hz waves will be delayed about 20 billionths of a second behind 10 kHz waves when traveling to the end of a 10 foot speaker cable. Since the cilia of the ear requires 25,000 times longer than this just to transmit phase information, phase shifting is obviously not the primary concern when considering speaker cables. What about resistance? Finally we are getting somewhere.
Amplification Ideally the loudspeaker would be among the first components selected when assembling a playback system. This would allow the user to choose an amplifier capable of delivering adequate amounts of current into the frequency dependent load presented by the loudspeaker. However, when upgrading a system, audiophiles may find themselves matching their new loudspeakers to their existing amplification.
Amplification How much power will your new speakers need? That ultimately depends on your listening environment and musical tastes. As little as five watts per channel should drive them to a level satisfactory for background music. A typical 45 watt per channel receiver may fill a room with the compressed mid-band energy of “heavy metal,” but seem to lack weight or control with classical recordings.
Amplification When an amplifier is unable to fulfill your loudspeakers demands, a damaging harmonic spike may be leaked to the high frequency drivers. Another important point regarding loudness is that the dB scale is a logarithmic one. This means that a 150 Watt amplifier will potentially sound only twice as loud as a 15 Watt amplifier. If all of this discussion of power and loudness seems a bit abstract, consider the example below.
Speaker Connections The Terminal Plate At the rear of each of your loudspeakers you will find a terminal plate housing two rows of jumpered binding posts. The upper row is the input to the "satellite" portion of the speaker. The lower row is the input to the "subwoofer" portion of the speaker. When left in place, the factory installed jumper bars allow the speaker to be driven with a single channel of amplification. (If biamping, or biwiring, be sure to remove the jumper bars.
Fine Tuning To facilitate proper set-up of your speakers in a variety of room situations, we have included several heavy duty toggle switches on the terminal plate, located on the back of the loudspeaker. All switches in the “up” position represent the “anechoic flat” position.
Specifications System Type: 4 drivers, 3 way Tweeter: 1” dual pole neo ribbon, folded Kapton diaphram Midrange: 1 x 5.25” Rohacell reinforced Silver Graphite, cast frame MidWoofer: 2 x 8” Rohacell reinforced Silver Graphite, cast frame Low Frequency Alignment: 4th Order Butterworth Frequency Response: 41Hz – 25 kHz Impedance: 4 Ohms Sensitivity: 93.5 dB Crossover Frequency: 2.2K, 12K Dimensions (H x W x D): 29.
Notes: 16
©2012 Legacy Audio 3023 E Sangamon Ave.