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What seems clear to me now... and this will probable sound controversial... and perhaps even nihilistic... is that any form of 'corrective' circuitry applied to 'taming' a drivers frequency anomalies extracts from the all-over musical presentation that magical sense of 'live'... that sense of hearing something that has a quality of spontaneous 'presence' that brings the music to life... and instead replaces it with a generic-like smoothness.
I don't want to give up trying to find a wide-range driver that will work in a 2-way OB design.
As for the filters, I use none, just an active crossover.
Have you had a chance to hear it in an OB application, Dave?
Your post begs the question: What is the "characteristic sonic flaw"?
I would guess it is the time delayed stuff off the back of the OB ... even outside with little or no reflection it is audible.dave
... the back wave of the drivers bouncing off of a wall behind the speaker and joining the front wave a few fractions of a second behind its 'throw', seems to create a holistic 'open' presentation that permeates the air/space with a very realistic (or the illusion of a realistic) sense of singers and or instruments floating in space.
Just wondering if you measured the FR of the OBs that you tried? It's not hard to produce a nice null in the midrange if baffle shape and driver location aren't done carefully.
Your assumption is just not true my friend. You imply that any type of tank circuit robs a driver of presence and prevents it from bringing music to life. No driver is linear both on and off axis and the best speakers in the world make use of some type of correction, separate from limiting frequencies. I can pretty much assure you that I can measure and correct a driver which you would prefer in a blind test over the same unaltered driver at the same relative loudness. People often mistake loudness for presence and are opposed to any component that lies in the signal path. Of course they subsequently complain about things like driver shout and off axis linearity. Speaker design is based on establishing priorities, considering your environment and in many cases, compromise. There is no free lunch.
Hi Matevana ~Your suggestion that: "People often mistake loudness for presence", is indescipherable to me. I have no idea what you mean by "presence" used in the context you describe here, relating it to loudness.I am not certain I can adequately describe 'presence' as I used it in my post. For me it is an effect that goes beyond any one quality that can be named or accounted for in 'measurable' terms. It is a sense of 'aliveness'... or perhaps the illusion of "aliveness" and "there-ness" that allows the mind to feel that the music has a spontaneous life to it... that it is not merely being mechanically reproduced.With Warmest Regards ~ Richard