I've just finished building a pair of Ripole subs for a friend who liked mine. These are the second pair I've built, and they turned out very nice.
As far as I know; you can't buy them from any manufacturer, but they are gaining popularity on the DIY Audio Forum.
The Ripole design came from a German speaker builder named Axel Ridtahler. Hence; the name "Ripole" is short for a Ridtahler dipole. It's basically a dipole with its baffle folded around a pair of opposing drivers in a push-push configuration.
Ripoles project a cardioid radiation pattern which blends quite well with ESL's, and their off-axis null makes them less prone to exciting the room's resonance modes, compared to conventional subs.
The pair shown below has woofer cases made from 3/4 AA red oak plywood with quarter-round oak moldings along the box edges.
The center C-section portion is made from 7/8" white oak planks stained a contrasting color, and aligned to the woofer cases with dowels. The three-part assembly is bolted together with (4) 1/4-24 all thread rods and button-head cap nuts.
Each sub uses a pair of 12" Peerless SLS woofers, wired in parallel and same phase (i.e. a push-push).
The build was a lot of work but they are unique subs and I really like their compact size and clean, unobtrusive sound.
The bass notes just seem to rise up from nowhere and recede back to nowhere-- completely un-localizable.
I have CAD drawings if anyone is interested.
As far as I know; you can't buy them from any manufacturer, but they are gaining popularity on the DIY Audio Forum.
The Ripole design came from a German speaker builder named Axel Ridtahler. Hence; the name "Ripole" is short for a Ridtahler dipole. It's basically a dipole with its baffle folded around a pair of opposing drivers in a push-push configuration.
Ripoles project a cardioid radiation pattern which blends quite well with ESL's, and their off-axis null makes them less prone to exciting the room's resonance modes, compared to conventional subs.
The pair shown below has woofer cases made from 3/4 AA red oak plywood with quarter-round oak moldings along the box edges.
The center C-section portion is made from 7/8" white oak planks stained a contrasting color, and aligned to the woofer cases with dowels. The three-part assembly is bolted together with (4) 1/4-24 all thread rods and button-head cap nuts.
Each sub uses a pair of 12" Peerless SLS woofers, wired in parallel and same phase (i.e. a push-push).
The build was a lot of work but they are unique subs and I really like their compact size and clean, unobtrusive sound.
The bass notes just seem to rise up from nowhere and recede back to nowhere-- completely un-localizable.
I have CAD drawings if anyone is interested.
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