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Hi Marvda1,Yes, toeing in the front will also change the driver distance / listener distance ratio slightly, while toeing the rear out will not. That's the only difference that readily comes to mind... this early!
If you have line arrays or other speakers with side by side drivers, the time alignment of the mid and tweeter lines can be adjusted by varying the toe in. For instance, changing the listening position from 30 degrees off axis (speakers firing directly ahead, equilateral triangle arrangement) to 0 degrees off axis (toed in directly at listening position) will change the relative distance between the listener and driver lines by about 1.25". This doesn't sound like much assuming a typical listening assuming a typical listening distance of 10'. But it actually amounts to a 90 degree phase change at a 2700hz crossover frequency, or additional 0.12msec delay group delay to the outer driver line. This is definitely audible ! Some drivers (particularly some planars in my experience) also exhibit major shifts in frequency response when going from off to on axis. ...
... the key to impulse and phase accuracy as well as imaging lies in achieving time-alignment at the listening postion via the correct toe-in, this is the equivalent of driver setback in a speaker with a vertical driver arrangement.Scotty ...
... My MGIIIs and SMGs both benefited from a deviation from the factory rake angle towards a more upright postion. ...
... Just because the acoustic centers of the drivers are in the same plane doesn't necessarily mean they will be time aligned set up as you described. For instance, a 4th order LR crossover between the mid and tweeter would introduce a 360 degree phase shift on the tweeter. In that case, for proper time alignment you would want the speakers set up with less toe in and the tweeters on the inside, thus relatively increasing the distance between the listening position and midrange compared to the tweeter and delaying the arrival of sound from the midrange...
Two Qs:1. What about the case of a 2nd order LR crossover between mid and tweeter? This introduces a 180 deg phase shift so the midrange driver is inverted to end up in an "in phase" situation. Surely this would require equal distance for midrange and tweeter to the ear?2. In a 3-way Maggie, which is the more critical crossover to get phase-aligned ... the base/mid or the mid/tweeter?Regards,Andy
As a 2nd order filter will produce 180 degree phase shift, the tweeter is typically inverted like you say. This results in "in-phase" output from the mid and tweeter, and the summed group delay should be flat. But remember phase and time are related -- a 180 degree phase shift on the tweeter means its output is delayed by one half a wavelength compared to the midrange. This amounts to about 4" at a 1700hz crossover frequency! So it is probably fair to say the Maggies are phase-aligned but not time-aligned (which is a rarity in loudspeakers). On a three way system I would think the bass/mid crossover is the more important to align, since phase problems are generally more audible at lower frequencies. ...
Hi, ekovalsky,Am I understanding it correctly ... in the above example, you are saying the mid and tweeter are phase aligned but not time aligned?If one of the two (the tweeter?) were located 4" behind the acoustic centre of the mid-driver (ie. the mylar sheet), then the two drivers would also be time aligned??Does this physical location not throw out the phase alignment?And at 2,600Hz (the actual crossover point) are we talking 2.6" not 4"???And the bass/mid is more important to get right ... mmm. Thanks,Andy
ekovalsky,the early series of Maggies that were 2way designs all had asimple 6dB/oct crossover. They deviated from this when the MGIII was brought out. The MGIII had a 2nd order parallel network but the values of the components used on the tweeter to midrange xover did not conform to any specific type filter design,[ie,buttertworth,bessel,etc]. I changed the filter to a 12dB/oct linkwitz/riley and this eliminated the harshness the ribbon tweeter had. From phase-coherent standpoint the the MGIII is un ...