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A simple nearfield bass test will tell you whether a company is telling the truth. Some of the TL specs quoted by manufacturers would require huge resonant peaks to get anywhere close to what is claimed for bass extension.
It is important that the room resonant frequency is below the -3db cut-off of the speaker for this to occur or you would indeed get a resonant peak. This is called matching the speaker to the room.
So one would need to rebuild the home to suit the speaker? Or is it that the speaker only works well in specific rooms, a subtle difference. If indeed a 5 1/2" driver in a loaded (stuffed) T-line cabinet achieves sub 30hz bass response in real world environments without severe response peaks I would applaud the designer's skill at defying the laws of physics. Yes, I'm skeptical. I'm willing to learn new things, but very little is new in speaker design beyond improved drivers and crossover modeling.
Almost every manufacturer makes claims that cannot be backed up. Most fall short of what they advertise. Some are funny. www.coconut-audioshop.com/ comes to mind.
Well, I’m sitting in my Tennessee home listening to my 42” tall by 7.5” wide by 8” deep DIY mass loaded transmission line speakers (MLTL) which have bass response below 35 Hz at the 3 dB down point. The cabinets have two 4.5” diameter drivers in each box. According to several responses to this thread, I’m defying the laws of physics, doing the impossible, and polluting my ears with sound peaks, etc. But I do this daily so I’m not the worst for it. The music is exceptional so I’m enjoying it.Some of those who responded need to learn about 21st century loudspeaker design techniques and comprehend what is possible. Researchers like George Augspurger, Martin J. King, and others have enabled speaker builders and manufacturers to achieve the impossible. Their work can be viewed at these links:http://documents.jordan-usa.com/Famous-Articles/Augspurger-Loudspeakers-on-Damped-Pipes.pdfhttp://www.quarter-wave.com/Augspurger’s Audio Engineering Society paper and King’s work detail how they developed computer models which accurately model transmission-line loudspeakers. King’s MathCAD based spread sheets and Augspurger’s software enable users to model performance similar to the Thiel-Small analysis of vented boxes and to build enclosures that agree with theoretical predictions. Transmission-line speakers can now be derived via sound design techniques using T/S parameters versus previously used cut-and-try methods or other secret mystical means which gave unpredictable performance.Use of King’s, Augspurger’s, and similar work is spreading within the industry with Salk Audio, Philharmonic Audio, Acoustic Insight, and others offering several MLTL models based transmission-line modeling techniques. My friend Paul Kittinger has a brief write-up on mass loaded transmission line methods and some simulation results for several of the Philharmonic models at:http://philharmonicaudio.com/philharmonicaudio/Graph_Pages/bassresponse.htmlUsing a similar technique, Atlantic Technology offers three products which utilize their H-PAS technology. H-PAS enables greater extended low frequency range, and/or greater output, with increased dynamic range and impact.My DIY speakers were designed with Martin King’s spread sheets and I’ve built more than a dozen different MLTL speakers over the past 7 years. Many of my projects are cataloged on threads on DIYAudio.com forums. Jim Griffin
http://www.theaudiocritic.com/downloads/article_1.pdfKevin
While it is true that most MLTLs have been realized with 4 to 7 inch diameter woofers, as Paul Kittinger points out in his link in my previous post, transmission line speakers trend toward very long line lengths and large cabinets for as driver size increases. Depending on driver selection, you will find that sensitivities in the low 90s dB SPL and greater than 100 dB SPL at cone peak extension are easily achieved for reasonable sized enclosures as low as 30 Hz. Clearly, we are not talking about subwoofer capable performance but the majority of household these days routinely use separate subs for movie sound effect coverage. The market for 250 pound, bathtub size full range speaker boxes with 15 inch diameter woofers is exceedingly small in the current speaker market.
If you want accurate low end, there's no comparison between a 15" woofer and a pair of 4" woofers.
29Hz @-3dB, 89dB efficiency from what looks like two 4" drivers. Is that possible from any sized box?http://websites.uk-plc.net/Ultra_Resolution_Loudspeakers/focalstage-floorstander-38825.htm
Good point and couldn't agree more, but it's not just manufacturers unfortunately. The magazines, reviewers and retailers are nearly all in on the game. Common audio lies summarised below:http://www.theaudiocritic.com/downloads/article_1.pdfKevin
A couple of links on the Atlantic Technology AT-1 MTM speaker which uses their H-PAS technology. They claim frequency response between 29-20 kHz +/- 3 dB response.
The enclosure size ( ith dual 5 1/4" drivers) is 1.6 cu. ft volume, sensitivity is 89 dB
They modestly claim that they break the "Iron Law" of loudspeaker acoustics
They modestly claim that they break the "Iron Law" of loudspeaker acoustics.