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What kind of component tolerance do you see as necessary for loudspeaker filters? This question was triggered by a short discussion at one of the manufacturers circles where I was kindly asked to leave. Seems fair in the current settings of that part of the forum. I won't provide a link to the thread to avoid stirring things up.There was mention of tweaking a crossover by ear with increments of 0.01uF on a base value of 100uF. That's a 'tolerance' of 1/100% I thought that was stretching it beyond bel ...
It is not a bypassing effect, since I usually replace the numerous small values with one large one after trimming. The influence on the sound of the system is the same.
Actually, the lowest value from which I can hear an audible difference is 0.01uF on 100uF of total capacitance.I buy 200pc sacks of the Sprague "orange drop" polypropylene caps for trim, bypass, and Zobel use. I start the trim with the average crossover value of the last 100 systems, less .1% of average capacitance value, and then approach it in increments of 0.01uF while listening. One value yields optimum clarity and definition, and 0.01uF on either side of this value does not.
Studies have shown that .2db differences tend to be the audible threshold.
Quote from: Rick CraigStudies have shown that .2db differences tend to be the audible threshold.What you happen to have references to any of those studies? Preferably online...
If I replace ten 0.01uF caps with one .1uF cap, and the sound does not change, that is adequate proof in my mind that I am dealing with a trim effect and not bypass.
You're also right about the audibility of absolute polarity, speaker breakin, 0.2dB level changes, listening quality of amplifiers, double blind testing, interconnects and power cords, speaker THD under 5%, supersonic and subsonic frequency response, you name it!I'm serious, as I sit here, admiring my two Best of CES awards for High End audio (2002,2003). It's all delusion.If you're not an AES member, please join. Only mainstream thinking allowed there, and I speak as a 15 year elected Secretary of the SF section.
Actually, the lowest value from which I can hear an audible difference is 0.01uF on 100uF of total capacitance.
My problem is I fail to see the logic in how matching from one side to the other of .01uf can matter when the reactance (capacitive in this case) and mismatch of the other parts, cables and drivers themselves dwarf this value.
The trimming procedure actually compensates for all the driver, wiring, and parts differences, which is why no one value is correct even for matched parts and drivers.
There enlies the crux of our disagreement. But anyway... then what happens when you change the pot a little?