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I was largely rehashing what Derek Wilson of Overkill had told me. Some of what he said did make sense, but no doubt it is mostly marketing talk.
The Salk HT3 definitely makes a nice target for DSP (be it with the TacT or DEQX). I am still waiting to hear from Rick and others how things work out with line arrays. The more reading I've done, it seems line arrays may be best with passive crossovers for the mid/bass cones and tweeter ribbons and limit DSP for the signal division between the arrays and separate subs.
I think digital systems will largely obsolete most every design besides point source monopoles and line arrays. ...
Correct me if I'm wrong, (and Lord Knows, I am not a speaker designing expert), but isn't the problem in a "conventional line array" (a line of cones and a line of ribbons or planars) that the cones will have a phase/alignment problem depending on the listening distance from the speaker?That is, the top and bottom cone drivers will be farther away than the center drivers. This then will cause a probelm for the single DEQX channel to both phase and align the total line???Now I think with the planar, ...
John,This isn't a problem with the ribbon tweeters. Because of their limited vertical dispersion you will hear only one or two adjacent drivers at a particular listening height. ...
With cone mid/bass drivers there will be some time delay from the drivers at the ends of the array compared to those near the center, which will be a bit closer to the listening positioning. The ear largely ignores this delayed sound arrival. ...
There are ways to design the speaker to overcome this issue. One would be to build a concave baffle to maintain equidistant distance between listening position and each driver. The Gryphon Poseidon can be yours for only $130,000 Problem with a focused array like this is the sweet spot will be limited to one chair, preferably one with a head vise! ...
What I see as a bigger issue with conventional line array designs is that they are by nature two way designs requiring a crossover around 2khz. Smallish mid/bass drivers must be used to keep driver center-center distances to a minimum, and this limits low frequency cutoff. Big cabinets and vents help but still none of the big line arrays are true full range systems. A really great line array design is the Martin Logan Statement E2. From 200hz up there is a curved, continuous electrostatic dipole array 68" tall. Since the panels don't move a ton of air, mid bass is supplied by eight 7" cones operating in dipole from 50-200hz. Below 50hz bipole corner woofer towers (8-12" drivers per side) take over. The 200hz crossover is a passive design built into the dipole towers (along with the transformer for the electrostatic panels) but the 50hz crossover is an external active unit, for which a DEQX or TacT could be substituted probably to very good effect. ...
Hmmmmm... do you really want a dynamically limited, bipolar speaker from 200Hz up?I wonder if there are any other driver choices, that have limited dispersion, can be arranged in an array, have good dynamics, and operate from the 200Hz up region???
Not that I can think of I do know of one planar unit which has some uncontrolled output in the 1-2khz range and lacks dynamics at its bottom end because it cannot move much air. It also has requires mechanical modifications to function properly. But it is a bargain in that it only costs about $25/unit in quantity. ..