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I am wondering what are the advantages and disadvantage of 2 way designs vs. 3 way designs. Pros and Cons of each, trade-offs, etc. Which do you prefer and why?Mike
I personally think in medium to large sized rooms it is difficult to argue for 2-way designs for critical listening. (unless you don't like bass, music with bass, never turn up the volume, etc.)
The reason I ask this is because I am currently building the Exodus 2641 kit and enjoying the process so much that I can't see myself not trying other designs.
Quote from: Midnite Mick on 22 Jul 2006, 02:00 pmThe reason I ask this is because I am currently building the Exodus 2641 kit and enjoying the process so much that I can't see myself not trying other designs.Mick: My primary speakers are the 2641s. I think you'll be very pleased. My prediction is that once you hear the completeness and depth that the 2641 provides, you'll have a hard time considering 2-way designs. Good luck --- be sure to post pics of your completed speakers. In-process shots are fun too!
The midrange and treble drivers need to be out into the room away from reflecting surfaces like walls. The bass drivers need to be near reflecting surfaces like walls.
Quote from: Bob Reynolds on 22 Jul 2006, 05:28 amThe midrange and treble drivers need to be out into the room away from reflecting surfaces like walls. The bass drivers need to be near reflecting surfaces like walls.That's only true if you are using room gain to boost your bass frequencies instead of watts and/or a better quality driver and/or larger driver. Even then, let's say you want the speakers to be at least 3' away from a wall (which is likely to mean a few feet farther if you measure to the first reflection points). You'll still get room gain on everything at 45Hz and below, IIRC.
I am wondering what are the advantages and disadvantage of 2 way designs vs. 3 way designs. Pros and Cons of each, trade-offs, etc. Which do you prefer and why?
The 2-way has only one crossover; but requires its drivers to cover more of the audio spectrum. The 3-wayrequires the drivers to cover less of the spectrum, so they can do so more optimally. But this comes at thecost of an additional crossover.There are competing issues with 2-way vis-a-vis 3-way; so one can't say 2-way is better or the 3-way is better.What counts is how well designed the 2-way or 3-way is, and how well that design is executed.So forget about how many drivers are in the speakers under your consideration; and just listen to them.
For decades marketers have been trying to convince us of the need for 20 - 20,000 Hz response at 120 dB, but most listeners are amazed the first time they sit down with a spl meter and test tones to find out how little sound (let alone music) exists at either frequency extreme and how damn loud 100 dB really is. For decades marketers have been trying to convince us of the need for 20 - 20,000 Hz response at 120 dB, but most listeners are amazed the first time they sit down with a spl meter and test tones to find out how little sound (let alone music) exists at either frequency extreme and how damn loud 100 dB really is.
No that's not true. It matters not how many watts nor the size of the driver; what matters is the dimensions of the room. Those dimensions will determine which bass frequencies are going to cause problems -- room modes. Having the bass driver separate, allows you to locate the driver such that you get good bass response at the listening position. Placing the bass driver near a boundary does provide additonal gain, but that's not the main reason for doing it. Corner placement will excite all room modes and that typically works well enough. I believe that Roy Allison's work addressed these issues.