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Click here to buy Primacoustic RX7 Recoil Stabilizer by Primacoustic.
Primacoustic


Availability: Expected: 12-06-2010.
List Price: $120.00
Discount: 17%
Our Price: $99.00
At Musiciansfriend.com on December 03, 2010.

The Primacoustic Recoil Stabilizer is a unique speaker-mounting device that eliminates disruptive resonant coupling from the loudspeaker to the stand while providing a stable base that reduces the recoil caused by the forward energy of the loudspeaker motion.

The RX7 model has a level top surface and fits many monitor models (listed below) with a 2.6" height x 13" width x 10.3" depth.

Made from three basic components, the Recoil Stabilizer is essentially a platform for the loudspeaker that features a high-density urethane base that isolates the speaker from the shelf, monitor-bridge or stand. This effectively decouples the loudspeaker to eliminate vibration-borne resonance to the substructure. A heavy laser-cut steel plate is added and sandwiched between the isolation layer and a no-slip neoprene top. The steel plate introduces significant mass to the structure and serves to stabilize the speaker.

By reducing the backward recoil energy as the speaker coil pushes energy forward, initial waveform transients no longer suffer lag and the sharpness of the resulting pulse is more defined. The result is significantly greater detail at all frequencies, with tighter bottom end and improved depth of field.

The Recoil Stabilizer is available in various sizes and weights to address different speaker designs and may be ordered in both standard and custom angles to precisely aim the loudspeakers for critical listening environments.

How It Works
Before getting into how the Recoil works, it is worth understanding some of the scientific principles involved and what problems they are actually solving.

Sound travels through air and other media in waves. These waves compress at various frequencies called wavelengths. Longer wavelengths tend to travel further while shorter ones travel in a more direct line. Longer wavelengths require more energy to generate and, once in motion, are very difficult to contain. With sufficient energy, long wavelengths will cause walls and floors to vibrate. Thunder shaking your house is a very good example of lots of energy applied to a low frequency.

Okay, so what does this mean in human-speak? Simply put, bass travels through just about anything while high frequencies are fairly simple to control. And has all of this got to do with near field monitors or reference loudspeakers? Those speakers produce bass and bass will transmit through the speaker stand to the floor, the walls and whatever is connected. This is called acoustic coupling. When sound vibrates in the speaker stands, they resonate and produce unwanted sound. To sum up, coupling causes a frequency bump at the resonant frequency that, in turn, changes the speaker's performance.

To solve the problem, engineers often employ urethane foam pads or other insulating materials under their nearfield reference monitors as a means to eliminate the resonance that occurs when the speaker and the speaker stand, (shelf or monitor bridge) couple. Good news: this does, in fact, effectively decouple the two devices. Bad news: it introduces a new problem that is best described as recoil.

Think of a rifle firing a bullet. The hammer strikes the firing pin which in turn causes the shell to explode, propelling the bullet forward. As the bullet pushes forward the rifle recoils backwards to absorb the energy. This is exactly what is happening when you place your speakers on a soft, spongy material; during a transient such as a sharp kick drum thump, the forward momentum of the speaker is dulled by foam as the soft malleable substance allows the speaker to tilt backwards and recoil. This recoil may be desirable when firing a rifle, but with a loudspeaker, the movement dulls the initial transient at the start of the wave, and the result is predictable: you lose clarity and detail.

What we really need is to both decouple the source and provide a stable platform.

The Recoil Stabilizer solves the problem by introducing a heavy mass on top of a high-density urethane isolation pad. By significantly increasing the mass of the base platform, the loudspeaker's forward momentum is no longer sufficient to move the platform backwards. It is stabilized and the recoil is significantly reduced.

If you think about it, this is exactly how a gyroscope works. Gyros are used in airplanes, torpedoes and missiles to stabilize the navigational system so that the device stays on course. By rotating a heavy mass very quickly (like the earth around itself-around the sun!) the centrifugal force retains the gyro's position relative to all axes. Since we need only control the effect from the speaker excursion in a single axis (front to back) we do not need a centrifugal force to steady the device, we can do the job with a simple, heavy steel platform that acts as the stabilizing mass.

This heavy platform is, in turn, sandwiched between the isolation pad and a non-slip neoprene layer. This works double-duty by providing the speaker with a comfortable resting place on which to sit while also working in symphony with the bottom urethane foam and mass of the speaker to dampen the steel plate. To further reduce self-resonance, a curved front panel aids in the process by varying the impedance, thus eliminating internal standing waves. This also adds more mass without increasing the footprint.

After many listening tests, Primacoustic found that a 4:1 ratio appears to work well whereby the mass of the Recoil should equal 25% or more of the loudspeaker being used. Primacoustic recommends using a 4:1 ratio whereby the weight of your monitor should not exceed more than four times the mass of the Recoil Stabilizer you intend to use. (i.e., if your monitor weighs 40 lbs., the recoil should weight at least 10 lbs.). You should also consider the firing angle and the positioning (vertical or horizontal). It is also a good idea to check the deck size to meet your monitor's footprint.

So there you have it.… By first isolating the speaker from the stand or shelf, you eliminate harmful resonance and by stabilizing the speaker by increasing the mass of the base, we directly affect the loudspeaker's inertia, and recoil is significantly reduced. The result: greater clarity and improved depth of field is immediately apparent. The Recoil Stabilizer is likely the most cost-effective means to improve reference monitor accuracy for engineers at all levels.

Kudos from the Artists:
"The Recoil Stabilizers are great! A huge difference from regular foam pads. They sound more stationary and connected. I'm quite happy with them." ~ Elliot Scheiner Engineer/producer - Steely Dan, Fleetwood Mac, Sting, The Eagles, Queen, REM, Faith Hill

"My nearfield speakers sound better on the Recoil Stabilizers than they did without them. The bottom is solid, the vocals are clear and my speakers don't fall down. It's a great product." ~ Daniel Lanois Engineer/producer - U2, Bob Dylan, Peter Gabriel, Emmylou Harris, Ron Sexsmith, Robbie Robertson

"The Recoils are remarkable! They seem to clear up the low mids, bring out the ultra lows and the transients come alive with greater detail. Very impressive!" ~ Joe Chiccarelli Engineer/producer - Bon Jovi, Frank Zappa, Tori Amos, Chicago, Poco, Bob Seger, Annie Lennox

"It's all about mass. Recoil Stabilizers add a noticeable measure of clarity for serious listening. I'm impressed." ~ George Petersen Editor MIX magazine

"The Recoil Stabilizers tighten up the bass incredibly and properly isolate the speakers from the console. My monitors are punchy and have more vibe. I haven't stopped using them." ~ Dave Bottrill Engineer/producer - King Crimson, Silverchair, Tool, Godsmack, Staind, I Mother Earth, Dream Theatre

"With Recoils in place, the speakers seem to sonicly float, the low-end is more defined, and I hear fundamentals that I never thought were there. The Recoil's brought new life to my nearfields — they have never sounded so good!" ~ Bil VornDick Engineer/producer - Bela Fleck, Alison Krauss, Jerry Douglas, Marty Robbins, Mark O'Connor

"A noticeable improvement in the sound with better imaging and a better controlled low end… the Recoil Stabilizers are the best isolators I have tried so far." ~ Paul White Editor - Sound on Sound magazine

"As soon as I replaced the foam wedges I had under my speakers, I heard a noticeable difference: The Recoils instantly sounded and looked way cooler. F…ing Awesome!" ~ Butch Walker Engineer/producer - Avril Lavigne, Fall Out Boy, Pink, Sevendust, Hot Hot Heat, Simple plan, The Donnas

"I found the improvement to be dramatic… the mix as having much more depth — reverbs and panning were much more obvious. The Recoils offer a simple way to kick your monitor's performance up a notch!" ~ Dave Rideau Engineer/producer - Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, Janet Jackson, Sting, TLC, Earth Wind and Fire

"The Recoils clear up and sweeten the tone overall and give a heavier, tighter bass. More fun to listen with for sure! Bottom line — they work." ~ Ari Raskin Chief engineer — Chung King Studios - Justin Timberlake, Sean Paul, Moby, Backstreet Boys, Black Eyed Peas

"I'm naturally skeptical…but the Recoil Stabilizers are the real deal. They do a great job of decoupling the speakers and give more accurate bass and better imaging. It's not just a subtle difference, but an obvious improvement." ~ Craig Anderton Editor - EQ magazine

"Elegant in principle, brilliant in execution…. that's the Recoil. What it does is so simple, and the improvement you hear is so immediate, you have to say to yourself, why wasn't this invented years ago?" ~ Andy Hong Gear editor - TapeOp magazin

"The Recoils are fabulous! The bottom is defined in a way I've never heard before. The really stunning thing is the way the pillowy, moophy bottom has tightened up. They have to be heard to be believed... certainly the most cost-effective upgrade one could make to improve monitoring." ~ Seth Glassmanagerie Engineer/Producer/Session Player - James Brown, Diana Ross, Aaron Neville, Carole King

Primacoustic RX7 Recoil Stabilizer Features:

  • Improves transient response
  • Widens the sound field for better imaging
  • Tightens up the bass response for greater accuracy
  • Available in several sizes and firing angles

    Components:
  • High density urethane foam insulator
  • Heavy mass laser cut stabilizing deck
  • Non-resonating front coupling plate
  • Anti-slip neoprene friction pad

Save BIG when you buy today!

Primacoustic RX7 Recoil Stabilizer Specifications:

  • 2.6" (66mm) height x 13" (330mm) width x 10.3" (263mm) depth
  • Weight: 44 lbs. (20 kg)

    Fits these monitor models when placed vertically:

    ADAM Audio
  • A7, ANF10, P11A, P22A, S1A, S2A, S2.5A

    Blue Sky
  • SAT 5, SAT 6.5

    Digidesign
  • RM1 and RM2

    Dynaudio
  • BM5A, BM6A, BM15A, AIR 6, AIR 15

    Event
  • Studio Precision 6, TR6, TR8

    Fostex
  • PM1, PM2

    Genelec
  • 1029A, 1030A, 1031A, 8040A, 8050A

    JBL
  • LSR4326P, LSR4328P

    KRK
  • RP6, RP8, VXT6, VXT8, V6, V8

    M-Audio
  • EX66, BX8a

    Mackie
  • HR624, HR824

    M&K Professional
  • MPS-1611, TB2S-A

    Tannoy
  • Reveal 6D, Reveal 8D, Precision 6, Precision 8, System 600

    Yamaha
  • MSP7, MSP10, HS 80M, NS-10

    Yorkville
  • YSM1-P, YSM2-P

    Fits this monitor models when placed horizontally:

    Genelec
  • 1029A

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