0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 74986 times.
Full range sound? My Fostex F200A based speakers do 30 - 20,000 Hz in room, which bests most multiple driver designs I know of.
Lack of driver resonances? Isn't resonances from a single high quality driver this better than cheaper multiple drivers plus crossover that can't integrate as well as a single driver?
Low distortion? Is this better than mixing drivers across a baffle? How much distortion is there at 80 dB (typical audiophile output levels)? A line array or field of drivers cannot image.
Good dispersion? Please define "good" dispersion. Wide dispersion causes reflections from side walls/floor/ceiling that interferes with imaging. Narrow dispersion can be aimed to adjust response.
All the OTHER things you get since one driver can't do it all? My speakers reach 103 dB continous and 109 dB peaks in a 2,000 cu. ft. (12 x 20 x 8)room. The 80 - 8000 Hz range is covers the essential musical range and more than covers the all important midrange. This is where single extended (full) range drivers live and thrive. Marketing hype has brainwashed the majority into believing that 20 - 20,000 Hz response at 120 dB with wide dispersion is needed..........
Rick,I doubt we disagree--I suspect 36dB to 48 dB/octave is plenty for even a worst case scenario. I only mentioned 96 as this is the minimum slope available for 2 of the 3 XO's and was the choice of the DEQX designers. The other filter set normally used for sub integration offers butterworth and L-R alignments as well as minimal phase, all of much lower order.
I think the one good thing about DEQX is that it *almost* brings all the various "isms" as my dad would say, under one tent. It has something for single driver lovers, horn lovers, ribbon lovers, cone lovers, etc. I think the only people who are skeptical are analog folk, but I do believe that is without reason. The advantages outweigh the disadvantages by a huge amount. DEQX is one technology that, I think, proves that one not need fear digital. AD and DA conversions are so good these days that they c ...
Ted_BHolly crap, your room is killer
Actually John there are several good designs (Selah Audio, Ellis Audio, Joseph Audio, Salk) available with passive crossovers that use the Seas Excel magnesium cone drivers. I would hardly call any of them unacceptable
The resonances are linear distortions so regardless of whether you have a simple 2-way or line array with multiple drivers they still will be present.
Line arrays have a cylindrical wavefront so the horizontal coverage is much broader than that of a point source speaker. The extent of the coverage still depends on the same aspects that affect a point source - lobing, driver directivity, and crossover execution.
I might be out numbered, but I've tried it both ways, having owned several multiple driver speakers and listened to many single driver speakers. Have you?
All I'm trying to say is that the need for/advantages of fancy crossovers, woofers, and tweeters is far more exagerated than most would believe compared to a well executed single driver speaker because they've never heard one. Is it rational to justify one approach or condemn another without evidence?
To say that it overrides all other tradeoffs and all other decisions in the signal path....well, I, for one, know it didn't in my case...
Quote from: BingenitoTed_BHolly crap, your room is killer yes, wery nice indeed. but one thing you can do, imo, for a big improvement - this topic yust came up in another thread re: florian's new rm30's - make the coffee table go away! doug s.
Ted, must be a bitch to watch movies with that hemholtz resonator in the way Beautiful room man....