0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 1645 times.
As a woofers diameter increases so does it's mass and it's ability to deliver detail in the midrange is progressively impaired. The woofer cannot start and stop quickly enough to do the job. As the mass increases so does the stored energy in the cone and this can also act to impair the drivers ability to deliver detail. The waterfall-plot on the driver would show this kind problem very clearly.
"There's a common misconception out there that heavy woofers must be "slow", and light woofers must be "fast". If a woofer A's moving mass is higher than woofer B's, then woofer A is probably going to be sloppy, or slow and inaccurate. Can't keep up with the bass line. Woofer A simply can't respond as fast as woofer B.There's also this concept that the "acceleration factor" (BL/Mms) is an indicator of woofer speed/transient response. High BL, combined with a low Mms, should give great transient response, right? Well, on surface these might sound like logical assumptions. However, they are in fact incorrect! More to the point, moving mass has precious little to do with woofer speed or signal response! And we'll prove it..."
Larger 7-8" drivers have more impact but sound a little warmer to me...
I believe there's some poor physics in the Adire paper though I haven't read through the whole thing. Maybe somebody else can evaluate this further but on the first couple of pages the Formula F=ma [where F is force, m is mass and a is acceleration] is reasonably enough, converted to BLi=ma [where BL is the motor force factor, i is the current and a is acceleration].