Description – Wisdom Audio Sage Series C38 User Manual

Page 5

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Description

Your Sage loudspeakers take advantage of several critical technologies to de-
liver a level of performance that has never been available in a loudspeaker that
intruded so modestly on your living space. In fact, this level of performance has
rarely been attained, regardless of the space and budget at one’s disposal.

Since most of these tech-
nologies cannot readily be
found elsewhere, we will
take the time to describe
them in more detail than
would be necessary for
more conventional designs.

Planar magnetic panels

Our planar magnetic drivers use an advanced, thin film membrane to move
the air. This film can respond instantly to the smallest detail in the signal. It has
vastly less inertia than traditional “cone & dome” drivers, so the signal is never
blurred in any way.

The motive force is provided by a “voice
coil” that is printed on the film, which is
suspended in a strong magnetic field pro-
vided by neodymium magnets behind and
in front of the film. The ratio of available
force to the moving mass is huge, which
means that the diaphragm does exactly
what it is told; nothing more, nothing less.

Free from compression

One of the most remarkable things about the sound of well-designed planar
magnetic speakers is their lack of thermal or dynamic compression. There are
several reasons for this:

• The lightweight diaphragm responds quickly to even the smallest

signals, yet is robust enough to handle enormous ones.

• The fact that heat does not build up in the voice coil (as it does

in conventional dynamic drivers) means that the load seen by the
amplifier does not change at high power levels.

• The pleating of the diaphragm allows greater excursions than are

otherwise available to small planar magnetic devices, further en-
hancing the driver’s ability to respond to dynamic program mate-
rial.

When you become accustomed to the sound of your new Sage C38 speakers,
conventional speakers sound a bit bland and lifeless.

More reliable

The “voice coil” in the planar magnetic driver is spread out over a large, flat area
that is exposed to the open air. As such, when a huge transient comes along,
any heat that is generated is immediately dissipated. This compares quite favor-
ably to other designs in which the voice coil is buried inside a massive piece of
metal, where the heat has effectively no place to go.

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