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Is that your rig in the avatar picture? If so, why worry. Rocket_Ronny
Why is the simple question, maybe I have this wrong but surely sound from the back of a driver is the last thing needed except in the case of backloaded horns or bass reflex. Everyone batters on about keeping open baffles away from the back wall to reduce reflections and then some use dipoles. I have read on AE's website and there is very little about the case for a dipole. Someone enlighten me
wanted a technical answer if possible,
keeping open baffles away from the back wall to reduce reflections and then some use dipoles.All Dipole speakers need free space around to form the 3D soundstage they are capable.As monopole boxed loudspeakers emits sound to the front only they dont need free room around, unless the BassReflex duct is in back as in the Klipsch RF line.
Actually, conventional monopole speakers radiate sound also to the rear......up to a certain frequency. This power response discontinuity is inherent and can't be corrected/addressed with normal modes of equalization.....or even room treatments.Dipole speakers have an inherent controlled directivity advantage (or "difference" if you prefer.) This characteristic, along with proper placement, can yield a "presentation capability" not possible with conventional speakers.Many variables of course.....so mileage may vary.Cheers,Dave.
Hi FRM, there is a helpful diagram at the link I provided, section B. The difference in radiation pattern at low versus high(er) frequencies is why conventional speakers have "baffle step compensation." Conventional boxed speakers (drivers on the front) are not monopoles, except at low frequencies. Bipolar speakers like the one you linked are much closer (to a monopole).With regard to the OP's comment "sound from the back of a driver is the last thing needed" - in actual fact, what a dipole speaker does is not to add sound at the back, but to remove it from the sides. That is assuming that you started with a monopole.
Hi John would you mind expanding on that. I assume you are talking about a flat baffle r.e. sound from the sides. Are you saying that the back wave cancels the front wave at the sides.
I can have my open box close to the rear wall without any noticeable difference than when its pulled out away from the wall. But then that may be my secret trapezoidal designed open box.
...I still don't see the point of a dipole woofer.
I run 15" alphas in an open box, a kind of folded baffle with a top and bottom if you like...
As I use DEQX to correct phase and timing errors measurements are not needed.
This thread has slipped off course, I still don't see the point of a dipole woofer.
I thought bass freq could reach the back of the speaker, as low bass tends to spread in all directions, and I thought hi freq were highly directional.Anyway dipole loudspeakers do a wonderful soundstage, much better and rich than the regular front firing speakers.
You are correct and the other description of monopole behavior was backwards. As we drop in frequency, the sound waves get longer and wrap around the sides of the cabinet. Below a certain point based on the wavelength and width of the baffle, the sound becomes omnidirectional, rather than unidirectional.