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If you do this then all that is affected is the low end response and if you are crossing that over in your receiver/preamp then you wont miss anything.
If you go by John Krutke's measurements (likely more reliable), your cabinet needs to be 17.24 litres and the -3dB point will be 68 Hz.
Quote from: WatsonIf you go by John Krutke's measurements (likely more reliable), your cabinet needs to be 17.24 litres and the -3dB point will be 68 Hz.Actually, I don't know that I'd make that assumption. IIRC Adire's tests were done by Dr. Klippel on very expensive equipment that I can only assume John does not have access to....
I don't see anywhere on Adire's website where they claim the measurements were done by Klippel.There are a couple of reasons why I don't trust Adire's specs:1) they published the specs before they moved manufacturing to Chile; there is likely some manufacturing variation in recent production2) manufacturers have a strong incentive to inflate their specs (e.g. Fs of 30 Hz for a 6.8 inch driver? John's measurement is more believable)3) I tend to trust independent measurements more.20% manufactu ...
Thanks for the help guys.I think i will just trust Adire and if it turns out bad i will blame them Anyway, So now i know how many litres to make the sealed part for the woofers how dose that relate to the size i make the LCR box? Dose anyone know the woofer volume as it is standard for the LCR?Or even better how much volume in litres dose the bracing and tweeter/mid box take up inside the total enclosure volume?I just need to know how much to shorten up the depth to reach the target 19 litres?Thanks again,Tim.
1) they published the specs before they moved manufacturing to Chile; there is likely some manufacturing variation in recent production
Second... we have little to nothing to gain by reporting T/S parameters that are wrong.
One thing to keep in mind are that the T/S model is an overly simplified explanation of transducer behavior. The parameters are not static... they change with power level (VC temp), the suspension of a driver is not linear (why we have a range of Cms measurements) and the atmospheric pressure changes. How all of these effect what enclosure to be used with a given driver is more complex than your simple software model is going to tell you. But you know who understands the system better than some guy on the internet? The guy who designed the driver! He has built more, designed more and has more patents to his name than some guy posting on an internet forum. If you don't trust his work in determining a relatively simple set of parameters I'd really say it's unwise to buy a product completely designed by him.
Sounds like calculator time for you. Sorry, this one should be simple math.