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What I'd really like is to mate a SoundLab Ultimate-1 (which I can assure you is not dynamically limited above 35hz) to the ML bipole bass towers. Mmmmmmm......
Shouldn't we be out hunting Easter Eggs or better yet Bunnies???
Hey John, how's this for a nice sweet spot ?
Remember a big advantage of dipoles is there is no sound from the enclosure, since there isn't any. The RM/X cabinets are about as dead as a bunny eating my landscaping but I cannot say the same for most other closed box systems, including the (non-MLS) RM-40 I used to own. ..
That speaker in the center looks rear ported.........
I though you if anyone could tell a "slot loaded" passive radiator when you saw one
Now thats a "sweet spot"..... How was this sweet spot.....[/list:u][/list:u]
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.
Rick, Salk himself is working on a DEQXable HT3 sans crossover. I'm not sure what a passive crossover could do that DEQX couldn't. If the box is the right size for the driver, that's all that matters (relative to the crossover part). Unless there's something really odd about the box that somehow requires added inductance or something (?!?), I don't think there's any downside. Got any more info on that idea?
Rick,I've skimmed through this huge thread, so please forgive me if I've missed something, but do you have immediate plans to compare say, your Carnelian as is, versus with the DEQX and no passive XO?Cheers,DSK.
Yikes...anyone catch Robert Greene's comments in the latest TAS on the DEQX'd Overkill system at CES? Guess he didn't like them much...
The response shaping for the transfer functions and power response is critical to a good design. That's where many people will have trouble with optimizing the sound. Well-executed passive crossovers are more complex than what you may think.
It becomes *substantially* less complex when you can run the crossover at 100dB/octave or more. At that point, there's really not much, IMO, that any passive anything can do to improve transfer functions or power response. These things are important in an analog speaker because the slopes are so shallow, you are using almost the entirety of the driver response, you will have some beaming in the midrange, cone resonances, etc, etc. This all goes out the window with DEQX. DEQX the Carnelians and tell me what passive components you need to tweak the performance.