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BTW, I own Bob Brines FTA-2000 floorstanding mass loaded transmission line speakers that use a single, highly regarded, Fostex F200A driver. For $1500 I get 89 dB/w/m, 8 ohms, 30 - 20,000 Hz in room in custom finished cabinets. The MLTL design makes these very easy to drive (a $500 6 wpc Clari-T does just fine).
So you are saying that this like a "crossover-in-a-box"? I could buy my own drivers, build my own cabinet, and use this as a user-adjustable crossover?
Exactamundo my man, and one of the big incentives for me as I didn't want to diddle with voicing xo's for a year or more. Plus with the steep slopes 96 to 300 dB/octave one can use the best drivers around that otherwise are difficult to employ--as in SEAS magnesium excel woofers, Manger drivers, etc. No accident that the highly regarded NHT and Overkill DEQX based units use these respective drivers. As for myself I am using the B&G 75 inch ribbons which are a bit troublesome otherwise as they have a cavity ...
You'll really like those 8" Seas drivers. I've used them in some of my designs and their bass extension is exceptional. One area I would disagree with you on. There was a controlled study done on the audibility of driver breakups and these steep 96+ db/octave slopes really aren't needed. I don't remember the exact AES preprint number but I believe Sean Olive was the author.
How does this product differ from a digital equalizer such as the Behringer Ultracurve Pro DEQ2496?
Quote from: BeeBopSo you are saying that this like a "crossover-in-a-box"? I could buy my own drivers, build my own cabinet, and use this as a user-adjustable crossover?Yep, and you wouldn't even have to be that GOOD at it, though it does help...
I thought the minimum for all crossovers was 48db/octave (48-300 range). At least that's what my documentation says. When I had the DEQX I had single amp so I'm not at all crossver-experienced. Ted
Why would anyone want to use multiple drivers?
Wouldn't two sources hurt imaging, especially nearfield?
Wouldn't two different drivers (woofer/tweeter) each with their "sonic signature" sound "funny" as they crossover (no matter how steep the filters)?
Wouldn't having the sound jump from one driver to another at the crossover frequency be unnatural?
Wouldn't the ideal synergy between amp and speaker use one amp channel per driver?
BTW, I own Bob Brines FTA-2000.
[This is why loudspeaker designers will soon become dinosaurs in the very near future (they already are in my book). The DEQX unleashes the power for the average Joe to achieve results that cannot be achieved by conventional means.
One area I would disagree with you on. There was a controlled study done on the audibility of driver breakups and these steep 96+ db/octave slopes really aren't needed. I don't remember the exact AES preprint number but I believe Sean Olive was the author.