0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 14386 times.
So many take a nice extended range driver with some sort of cabinet/mounting, and then want to smuck it up with super tweeters, woofers, or worse yet let that nice extended range driver multiply in the same cabinet/mounting.
Don't they realize the "evils" of crossovers? Don't they appreciate the precision or lack of phasing errors using a point source?
Can't they hear the advantage of active design (one channel of amplification connected directly to one driver)? Thinking of 2-way, 3-way, dipole, bipole, various arrays, coaxial designs, and any other use of multiple drivers per speaker.
But there's the magic of doing the midrange right and the limitations can be largely be overcome with the right driver/speaker design.
BTW, I consider the single driver speaker with a swarm (search AC if you're not familiar) of subwoofers the ideal (and not a violation of the mantra).
I agree with Dave on the adding of a low frequency driver. I like to let a more capable woofer or woofers handle at least from 200Hz and down. This keeps them just out of the mid-range and doesn't have any negative effect at all. And relieving the full range driver from seeing those lower wavelengths can also improve the sound of it across the board. I prefer a single small cap value used in the RCA input to the amp to roll off the lows. This tends to increase the headroom of the amp as well since it sees much less current demand not having to produce the lower range.
Interesting, Danny. I might have to look into this. Harrison Labs makes a variety of exactly what you're talking about, if one is not inclined to make their own. At 200hz, subwoofer placement would be pretty critical, right? For such, would you maybe recommend something like 100hz?
Sure, you can make your own high pass filter. The value you need also depends on the input impedance of your amp. So be sure to look at that. Here is one with a by-pass for the amp driving the lower range woofers. And at 200Hz or so you are dealing with wavelengths that are about 5.5' long. So you want your acoustic centers to be less than that distance apart. And the closer the better. If your crossover point is double that (100Hz) then you need to keep the woofers to within (less than is better) 11 feet of the mains (center to center).
Personally, I've seen the "purist" single driver (no circuits) approach work many times, with the trade-off that you have to choose the music to avoid the speaker's weak spots. With no circuit, the single-driver designs need a whole lot of help from the boundaries (walls, floors, corners, ceiling) which can only partially flatten the response.At that point, though, the "point source" is often degraded (e.g., too many reflections from boundaries, furniture, shelves etc.) It seems much better to use a .5 driver and get the speakers further from boundaries, which improves imaging (at the small cost of a cap or coil).One exception I've noticed is a back-loaded (or tapped) horn which extends directly into the (floor or ceiling) corner, but the rest of the box extends out into the room. This gives good imaging if (and only if) you sit in just the right spot. But as good as that can be, a .5 driver (pulled out into the room) seems to get better imaging more easily (because you can pull it away from boundaries and furniture), with the trade-off that you obviously need twice the drivers (not always an option, e.g., when using vintage or expensive drivers).
BLHs used to be a trend some years ago...But none of them sound right, the bass is always "wooly" and lags behind, destroying PRAT. They have all disappeared...The only possible exception is the Voxativ BLH, but it's $40k
How many have you heard, though? It sounds like not that many (because the Voxative is at best average compared to the better computer-modeled designs). The "wooly" part is not inherent, it's a common misalignment, usually trying to get more bass out of them (most ported boxes are also mis-aligned, as are most multi-ways). There are good and bad examples, and 99% of everything is junk.
At least 6, probably more... a few made by Feastrex or Lotus Audio, a few made by other companies.