0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 4925 times.
For the top end, from say 100-200Hz on up, I would like to run a 15" wide range driver, either the Audio Nirvana Super 15 or Hawthorne Audio Silver Iris 15.
As you've pointed out, the Hawthorne is not a wide range driver at all. So my question is, do you want to run a wide-range driver, or would you prefer a tweeter? It just seems to me that the design decisions pan out quite differently depending on this.
Why are you focused on such a large driver to cover everything above 200 Hz? Why not think smaller, no larger then 8 inches, where the top end extension will not be an issue? The heavy lifting is done by the bass drivers, use a smaller full range to give you the full range sound and the top end extension you are after. By restricting yourself to the AN 15, you are not getting much additional help in the low end and are compromising at the high end of the audio spectrum. One other piece of advice, use a crossover on each driver. Do not run the full range without a filter and allow it to overlap the bass drivers, the system will have an artificial lift which at first will sound appealing but later will sound off (I have done it both ways back to back with my active crossover and it is no contest). By removing the low frequency signal form the full range driver you will improve the high frequency performance from the driver.
I just noticed that Pyle still makes those PPA15 drivers. At their going price and how well I know these drivers sound and perform, I may just get two more pair and use four of them per channel for maximum bass oomph and efficiency in those small W-frame baffles.
I'm a bit confused about your goals, the 12" Eminence you have are speced at 95 dB/W/m while the Pyles are 90 dB/w/m?
The AN 15" full range drivers are not any more efficient, maybe even a little less due to the high moving mass, than some of the 8 inch full range drivers. I think your system is becoming large and more complex without addressing the goals of high efficiency and treble extension. Two 15"woofers in H or U frames for below 200 Hz and an 8" full range driver on an OB for above 200 Hz is really all you need. More is not necessarily better.
If I had $200 to spend per driver, I would seriously look at one of the Tangband W8 full range drivers (models 1772 or 1882 if I rememeber correctly).
My result for a similar speaker design.
I see what you're saying, but then why do others go with 10's, 12's and 15's for the full range drivers? I would think for the higher micro/macro detail retrieval and overall larger scale of the reproduced sound. That was one of the thing I loved about my Maggies. They weren't the best ones available, but because of the much larger driver surface area over standard cones and domes, it just painted a bigger picture with that 1' wide by 5' tall driver.