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AJ, Thank you for the recommendation. I have actually been looking at that Dayton driver a while ago, but I thought Qts was too low requiring a too much EQ/power.
The drivers will be placed (as it is right now) with the 15" woofers above each other with Neo8-Neo3-Neo8 placed next to them to keep the height of the speaker below 1 meter
I'm only able to place the speakers maximum approx. 75cm/30 inches from the back wall. Will that have any impact on driver selection as in will a lower Q woofer require even more EQ to compensate for the distance to the back wall opposed to a higher Q woofer?
What about beaming? Large woofer, high crossover point.
The boss wasn't too happy with the idea of visible drivers on the back - fair enough.
And with the EQ of a low Q woofer won't I see sensitivity go down quite a bit, or shouldn't that concern me at all? I usually don't play very loud.
Also, I'm having this idea that the Dayton won't do as well in the midrange compared to OB-A15se for example due to heavier cone and higher LE.
At the cost of low-end extension, of course. Or shouldn't that concern me either?
All your questions would be answered if you modeled your baffle design with both drivers in the free programs linked.
If you don't mind my saying, low end extension is not really a valid concept - it really depends on what you are aiming for but the low end "carries" everything else. So it's not "extension" per se, it's either there (in that "Hercules" role), or not. Anyway that's my experience and why I suggest separate subs
I would really like to stay with dipole bass - I've read so much good about it And though I don't listen to pipe organ music yet (maybe really good speakers will make me appreciate it), I don't like to have that limit hanging over me. I think I will stick with 2x15".
Again, seperate subs will mean 4 "boxes" which didn't receive the "approved" stamp . And it would probably also mean no OB bass?
You have to be realistic... I suppose that's part of what I mean... if you are keen on designing a system that produces 16 Hz tones (at any reasonable volume), OB isn't a good place to start.
No, you can have separate OB subs. Moving them close to the listening position will make them a lot more effective.However, there's a point where you have to build (and measure) something to learn