Genesis Advanced Technologies 1.1 User Manual

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Another advantage of the 7.5-foot line source is that the vertical 
spectral content of music is virtually the same throughout the length of 
the line source. Hence, the seating height does not matter with this 
speaker; unlike point source speakers where it is important for the 
ears to be aligned with the tweeter. 
The Genesis 1.1 is also a dipole radiator. The midrange and tweeter 
drivers are mounted on a rigid Corian™ baffle with no enclosure. This 
has two advantages: firstly, it eliminates any enclosure or boxy 
colorations caused by cabinet vibrations or resonance. 
Secondly, the dipole creates a cardioid pattern (like a figure-eight), 
which has its maximum output at the listening position and behind the 
speaker itself, and minimum output to the sides in the plane of the 
loudspeakers. This very effectively eliminates the bounce from the 
sidewalls. Hence, in conjunction with the line source, the Genesis 1.1 
has no first reflection from the floor, ceiling or sidewalls. The net result 
is that there are far fewer detail-robbing room reflections from the 
room than other types of loudspeakers. With fewer spurious 
reflections to confuse your hearing, the program source emerges 
more clearly. Imaging is deeper, yet more focused. 
This results in a loudspeaker system that is virtually room-
independent. Also, because there are no phase and frequency 
distorting reflections created, one can be transported into the 
audience of the actual concert hall where the music was recorded.  
4.2  The Genesis Ribbon Tweeter 
Reviewers in the Audiophile press have often remarked that the 
Genesis circular ribbon tweeter is the world’s best. It is a one inch 
circular planar ring-ribbon design crafted from an extremely thin 
membrane of Kapton with a photo-etched aluminum “voice coil” that is 
a mere 0.0005 inch thick. The entire radiating structure has less mass 
than the air in front of it! That is why it will accurately reproduce 
frequencies beyond 36k Hz. 
The result of this design is a driver that has a rapid and uniform 
response to high frequencies, and has the speed of the best 
electrostatic designs without the high distortion and poor dispersion 
that is typically associated with them. 
The Genesis 1.1 uses twenty-six of these tweeters configured as a 
vertical line source (twenty front-firing, and six to the rear). In addition 
to creating the dipole line source, the output is distributed over many