Hello, new to the community. The fiancee and I are finally able to move out of our cramped 1 bedroom apartment to a proper home, which means I will finally have room for a proper audio experience. I have been looking at Klipsch's heritage line and believe it would be the best way to go. Coming from others in my audio social circles it is quite popular to buy the vintage Klipsch forte's and modify the crossover for a better sound profile. I have been looking for used online and have found 3 solid options for speakers that would be well suited for my situation.

forte II basically mint condition. Crossover already modified, Crites titaniam tweeters(something I had planned to do as well), $1500. 4 hour one way, willing to make a day trip out of it if worth it.


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From the pictures, it looks like its also near mint condition, stock. Price also $1500. On the way to where I will be traveling in a week so no commute factor. Color better matches our living room style(Fiancee's input).

I am leaning towards the cornwall's as they seem to have a great reputation within the lineup in general and I figure I can take time to swap things around as I see fit as I go. I also have a contact who puts together and does crossover changes often(but would have to ship it to me as he lives across the boarder) so access to that would be pretty smooth as well.

If it helps I also attached the blueprint of the living room space it would be in. Where it's marked TV is where we have our TV wall mounted now so it would be on either side of it at least for now. We wouldn't have two table areas shown in the blueprint so the couch area would be able to be pushed back to make room for more speaker clearance from the wall. So a lot of room to play around with speaker location wise.

aftermarket parts alter the klipsch sound in a negative way , while klipsch original parts do not , factory capacitors and tweeter diaphragms are available from klipsch for pretty much the same cost as aftermarkets + Forte II crossovers may still be in perfect specs , so you can stretch the expense for later .

And, this is a highly biased opinion that many long time forum members will certainly not agree with. Alas, Our posts will be deleted and the end user will be mis-lead. Before the lock down comes ..... search elsewhere. Your questions are valid ones.

OEM klipsch parts are superior to aftermarkets because klipsch factory parts adhere to strict quality standards at roughly the same price as the cheaper aftermarkets , it's an excellent bang for the buck , + the products come with a klipsch full warranty ,it's a no brainer .

Hmm I see what you guys mean, and it is something I've gone back and forth on. I also do like the idea of starting stock and letting my ears decide where to go from there. In terms of changing the crossover I do think I am leaning towards that modification though, just based off my listening preferences and what I've heard so far.


Also I don't know what you mean by lock down but if I didn't post this in the right place or properly....honest mistake, let me know and I can change it.

Yes! This is why I'm leaning towards the cornwalls. Thanks for the welcome! I am very excited to start this obsessive, expensive, maddening journey with Klipsch, I'm sure my partner's going to love it too?

Oh yes, I watched one of my best friends go through it, I will be inching everything daily, marking off the perfect spot with floor tape and then readjusting it again in no time. I also have a parametric room acoustic optimizer on my current receiver, I'll obviously be buying a proper amp but I wonder if it can be useful for that.

I have Beat Saber, and I've had it for years, ever since I got my Meta Quest 2. But after I started playing PCVR using the Rift program, I discovered that it had cross-buy on some of the games that I had beforehand. This led me to look for more of the games that I had, and this led me to take a look at Beat Saber.

I've watched people play Beat Saber on PCVR since before I had my own headset. I've always looked at the PCVR version of the game and thought that I was missing out on a lot of the fun stuff, like the custom songs and cool graphics, plus i have a powerfull PC to play PCVR games on.

And so, I wanted to see if I could install it, I found that it cost money, even though I had allready bought it. This was peculiar since I have the Quest version of the game already, and that it's a Meta flagship that's on both platforms. Is it really that unreasonable to think that I shouldn't need to pay for the game twice? Because I just don't have the money for that.

I understand that they are pretty much two different games, but still. If you look at Green Hell VR, the game on PCVR is completely different from the Quest version. The map is huge and open-world on PCVR, while on Quest, it's more like a path you can traverse. The crafting system is completely overhauled from the Quest version. On PCVR, there's a building system.

Normally the choice of cross buy is up to the developers. But Beat Saber is now owned by Meta, so ultimately they decide. Of course as one for the most successful VR games on Meta headsets, they probably like getting paid twice.

On the other hand, Beat Saber came out before the Quest existed. It was purely a PCVR game. The later Quest version required significant extra development work to get the game running acceptably on mobile hardware. So its not too unreasonable to want to be paid for both versions, since it cost them to make both.

I know, but I don't want to buy the game again. I want the PCVR version, but I don't have the money for it. And that means I'll have to spend money on something that I shouldn't need to buy two times. If I ever got the money for it, I'd rather spend it on something that will be a new experience rather than something that's just an improvement to something I already have.

This is just my personal opinion, but I feel like needing to buy the game again to get the PCVR version is a scam. If I had a PC when I got my VR, I'd have bought the PCVR version instead. But I didn't have a PC at the time, and so, I guess I'm just stuck with the Quest version.

I don't feel like I have to have the PCVR version, but it's been one of the reasons why I wanted a VR headset at all. I've spent hours watching VR content creators play games I could only dream of one day playing. So when the Quest 2 came out, I wanted to play those very games. And so, I bought the games that I wanted. One of them was Beat Saber, and it's fun. But it's far from what the standard PCVR version offered. At the time, I was fine with this. But as time has gone by, I got a PC to play PCVR games. And when I found out that some games have cross-buy, I wanted to see what games I could play on my PC instead. But it turns out that Beat Saber doesn't have cross-buy. And so, I'm stuck with the Quest version. It's not bad by any means. But it's not as versatile, and I can't play any other songs than the standard songs or stuff I buy from Meta.

We at BSMG strongly advise against using any video tutorials for modding. Often, we find that they are either outdated or contain incomplete, erroneous, or straight up incorrect information.

Modding your game will disable Official Multiplayer as well as viewing and uploading scores on the base game leaderboards. If you would like to play modded multiplayer, you need the mods, Beat Together and MultiplayerCore, which allows for cross-play between PC and Quest and for custom songs to be used.

To restore your data, open SideQuest and connect your Quest to your PC.

 Using the SideQuest file explorer, take the 3 files you saved from the Backup Save Data using SideQuest steps AvatarData.dat, PlayerData.dat and settings.cfg and put them in the sdcard/Android/data/com.beatgames.beatsaber/files folder.

BMBF is generally easier to understand for beginners with a simpler UI compared to QAVS, but lacks a built-in downgrading option. If you use BMBF to mod, you will need a PC every time you update Beat Saber.

QAVS is recommended for people who are using an Android device or don't have access to a computer at all times. It has built-in downgrading, which means you don't need to use a PC or phone every time you want to update Beat Saber to the latest moddable version.

If you have not already, go to Preparations and follow those steps. You should now have Developer Mode enabled and SideQuest Advanced installed on your PC. It is recommended to disable the proximity sensor of your quest in the SideQuest device settings. This prevents it from going into sleep mode during the modding process. Alternatively you can tape up the sensor between the lenses.

Modding currently does not work with multiple accounts. You will need to temporarily remove all secondary accounts before modding the game. You can add them back once the modding process is completed. 152ee80cbc

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