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if we're talking about bass, the LW design suffers from the same problem as every other full range OB speaker - musical bass that lacks punch and impact.
I only posted about the OB Servo subs because they are a better solution for people looking to build an OB speaker.
You've heard every full range OB speaker?? Wow.In a remarkable coincidence you happen to have chosen to own them too. They are indeed very good and most certainly a viable option, especially for DIY (or even I, a manufacturer). "Better" just might be in the eye of the beholder.Btw, in another remarkable coincidence, the guy (PDR) who posted under your post that I quoted, seems to no longer have a servo dipole sub based system in his avatar. I wonder how this can be reconciled?cheers,AJ
Back to the original quote: "It is difficult to screw up an open baffle speaker design to where it sounds worse than your typical box speaker." - Siegfried Linkwitz.Proof that even smart people exaggerate for emphasis- or perhaps it's taken out of context. If you read this to mean that some diy OB drivers thrown into a baffle will be better than a cheaply but professionally designed box speaker, I don't agree.
Obviously the "every OB design" has an implicit "that I've heard" attached. Don't be a douche.
My favorite setup is mine, using the Super 7's. But my 2nd favorite setup is Pez's which uses the VMPS RM40's run fully active (box speakers) and my 3rd favorite is a variation of the Gedlee Abbey (box speaker).
Btw, in another remarkable coincidence, the guy (PDR) who posted under your post that I quoted, seems to no longer have a servo dipole sub based system in his avatar. I wonder how this can be reconciled?
No it wasn't obvious, but thanks for now clearly making it so even a "douche" can see. Well then I guess there might be plenty other OB systems with "punch and impact", including Linkwitz based ones. It's just that in your opinion, there are none you've heard.
It seems the discussion focus has narrowed to low frequencies now? SL's preference (and the OP's original comment) regarding open-baffles is not just for bass frequencies.
I've talked to SL numerous times about this. He considers the open-baffle approach inherently robust and superior to boxes. Even efforts that are butchered by designers with minimal skills can/will sound halfway decent. The radiation pattern is inherently superior....there are no box issues like re-radiation, stored-energy....they're generally much cheaper to construct....etc....etc....etc.Dave.
I also think a large part of that is due to the way bass response is measured, particularly not taking into account the settling time of the system in response to signals at various frequencies through the range. In other words, two speakers that measured identically flat right through the range of, say, 200 Hz on down when fed by a slow sweep might sound very different through that same range when fed a music signal, due to the slower settling time of one compared to the other; the one with the slower settling time sounding louder, and perhaps more 'impactful'.
I guess you could consider the 15" woofers and the servos sub woofers
I consider lower midrange and bass (~300 Hz on down) to be the most affected by re-radiation, which I also consider to be the most serious liability of box enclosures—the muddying of the sound by re-radiation through the cone. Frequencies from approximately 300 Hz and up are more easily absorbed more or less completely and don't require much enclosure volume, so are much less of a problem in my experience.
How do you separate that from the 6db less power/excitation and decay of room modes, when you observed? Was the listening done outside?
How are you defining "settling time" and its relation to audibility?
I have listen various top money famous loudspeakers big and small in rich people homes and all they sound sterile due xover presence and have a poor 2D soundstage due driver is working inside a box.Even so I still had to tell the proud host> Wow these your speakers are wonderful
In Europe they sometimes include a revealing multitone-graph which displays the amount of noise generated by the speaker (intermodulation distortion) quite clearly, when fed by multiple discrete tones. Here's an example from this page (click on 'Intermodulation Distortion'):http://www.neumann-kh-line.com/neumann-kh/home_en.nsf/root/prof-monitoring_knowledge_glossary_measurement
Gosh, that seems like rather a severe test but also quite revealing (per the Neumann measurements at the link)!
I have never attempted a definition of settling time, but here goes: "the time taken by the driver or the system (driver and box or panel) to stop generating acoustic output once the input signal stops". In an ideal transducer, whether microphone or loudspeaker, settling time and its inverse—rise time—would be instantaneous. In an imperfect world we have to be satisfied with 'quick'.