0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 19115 times.
I. M. Fried Model H (the 'famous' coffin stereo sub, with 8 inch woofer,
was rated to 114 dB at 17 Hz
Are you sure it was as early as 1976? We were selling these i don't recall them being introduced that early.http://www.t-linespeakers.org/classics/friedH/fried_H.htmlProbably a bit of an exaggeration.dave
Second, Danny points out the problem with running the dual Jordan drivers full band in the FocalStage floor standing speakers. A few years ago I remember a British Hi Fi magazine review of an earlier Aurousal speaker which had two Jordan JX92S drivers run full range with the same arrangement. The published plot showed a major dip in the treble area and I suspect the same from their latest implementation. This FocalStage speaker really needs a proper crossover to enable these drivers to excel.Third, it is great to see Martin King and JLM check-in on this thread.Jim
Interesting observation and worth commenting upon. Yes the FocalStage does use the drivers in twin formation. This by itself does not necessarily cause any frequency irregularities (comb filtering) as the listener is typically on a central axis and they are equi-distant from the listener (or so close to equi-distant that such filtering is much less than any perceived room acoustic anomalies.
It's a design consideration but it was deemed that the advantages of having a switchable tweeter that compliments the dispersion profile of the Jordan and can be adjustable outweighs the advantages of having a crossover so potentially smoother response curve at the very top end. This is because:1. The dispersion profile of the tweeter is very different to (and compliments) the Jordan so the slight comb filtering effect is actually not noticeable at distances greater than 1M and the usual listening distance for such speakers is excess fo 3M
The problem with the standard frequency test is that it is done close-field so will show up comb-filering effects that are just not audible at normal listening distance (where they are far outweighed by room nodes).
Something else I forgot to mention. You can't avoid comb filtering effects in any normal stereo setup anyway as you are listening to 2 independent high frequency sources that are separated by a relatively large distance. You will get very large HF dropouts as you move you head from left to right in the soundfield, even if you rotate your head slightly, and this is commonly not deemed an issue. If you measured the effect using a standard frequency plot it would look horrendous compared to any theoretical issue with doing away with the crossover. Of course it's rarely an issue in reality with real music in a real room, or we would have done away with stereo decades ago!
2. Deliterious effects of any crossover on transient response and distortion as we know3. Deliterious effect of completely splitting the frequency response on coherence4. You lose any ability to adjust the dispersion profile with a full crossover
And again, this will be worse with 4" drivers and a longer acoustic center spacing.
And you run the tweeter with no crossover? Really?
The speakers have 4.5 db of baffle-step compensation built in to cater from some rear-loss at low frequencies.
The Jordans should be classified as 5 1/4" drivers.
In post #1 Kevin says he is using a high pass on the the tweeter at 9k,so there is an XO, just not on the FRs.
The theoretical issue is with the teeter on and yes there is no crossover here.
To the question of efficiency: We have 2 drivers rated at 84 dB which gives 87 dB efficiency (90 dB sensitivity given parallel connection) less 4.5 dB BSC yields 82.5 dB efficiency.And one would assume some sort of filter (ie XO) to achieve the BSC?
If I were improving your FocalStage implementation, my advice would be to implement a 2.5 way crossover. The 0.5 part would be to roll off the bottom woofer to achieve baffle step compensation and then have a crossover to the tweeter in the 3000 Hz area. You would have a much more balanced frequency response and proper dispersion within the room. You get the full impact in the bass region of the two drivers and you have a substantial improvement with in the treble range.
I am going to offer you some more help with these Kevin. Jim and I will tell you without question, and from experience, that a crossover between the tweeter and upper woofer will sound better. However, if you are dead set on using no crossover or letting the Jordan's play full range then try this....Mount the tweeter on top of the box (facing up) or on the back of the box. This will still give you an added since of air, spacial cues, and improved imaging without adversely effecting the on axis response with comb filtering effects. You get the benefits of the added tweeter without the adverse effects. You might even play with any in line resisters to let the level come up a little.