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What might be a highest feasible low pass with that W- frame from GR's site?
Hmmm, it was my understanding(possibly wrong) that you could set Xover and EQing manually rather than use the fully automatic settings and then run room correction and phase correction voodoo.Greg
You cannot build dipole subwoofers (unless the baffle is humongous) because subwoofers are already omnipolar. You could put drivers on either side, or you could open the back of the driver (unenclosed); but it would still be omnipolar. The following article is on baffle diffraction: but anything below the effect of the baffle is omnipolar.http://trueaudio.com/st_diff1.htm
"Traditional" subwoofers are omnipolar (monopole) because they're closed or vented boxes which either block the rear radiation or store it for later use, respectively.
Dipole woofers can certainly perform to "sub" frequency ranges if so desired. You do run into the physics and it might not make sense because of the trade-offs required, but it's certainly possible. And they're still "dipoles" and not "omnipoles."
John Murphy's article is mainly discussing baffle-step correction for conventional speakers. An effect usually at much higher frequencies. When venturing into dipoles, many of the traditional design techniques/corrections become unnecessary and/or meaningless