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However, I did get a laugh out of the "discussion" of time coherence on the Meadowlark site. I didn't learn anything.....except about "how the nature connects the stars to my soul." I feel like a beer.
I am in no way able to comment technically on crossover design. I can only tell you that out of all of the speakers I've ever heard, only ones with 1st order crossovers, wired in phased, with sloped baffles, give the actual space, image density, and soundstaging that are essential parts of the puzzle for me. It just doesn't make much sense to me to have multiple drivers starting and stopping at different times, on purpose. I know that no speaker design is perfect, but time and phase coherent speakers just sound more real to me. Just my 2 cents.
So, first order, time aligned, phase correct speakers have the following problems:1. Increased cabinet costs2. Extremely poor vertical dispersion3. High cone woofer/midrange cone resonances4. Increased driver distortion for midrange/tweeter5. Limited dynamic range6. Very limited sweetspot, vertically and horizontally7. Increased crossover complexity and expense.8. Limited choice of appropriate drivers for good performance
That's definitely pushing my limits of understanding! Everything, really, affects linearity if you think about it. I suppose it depends too on where you define the signal in/out point. If you say at the binding posts, then definitely everything matters. That's why a digital speaker will be far more linear than a passive one even though they're not directly affecting the motor structure of the driver. But for instance, I don't know if the box volume of a sealed speaker creates a more linear output at on ...
I guess one of the things that has puzzled me over the years is that drivers are supposed to have this pistonic motion to them. Now when I think about a piston I think about what happens inside an internal combustion engine where the piston is moving in a very precise chamber in a very contolled fashion. Now when I look inside a loudspeaker and look at the inside of the box I don't exactly get the impression I am looking inside a very precise chamber. Am I missing something here? Maybe someone could explain that to me. d.b.
I can't believe it makes sense to someone to have three people in a room trying to tell you the same story, at the same time, saying the exact same thing, but taking turns speaking. I know this isn't exactly what's going on in a speaker, but you can get what I'm getting at. No matter what any of you say, having multiple drivers trying to make music, a naturally coherent and in phase event, using out of phase drivers just doesn't make sense. I know there are many other factors in making a good speaker, but t ...
I see people speaking of measurements, but few people talking about what it actually sounds like. In my experience, phase correct speakers have always offered more depth, image dimensionality, and a better illusion of real instruments in a real space. It's far easier to lose myself in the music.