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I need a little help understanding this design concept, but according to the following website...http://www.tnt-audio.com/topics/frequency_e.htmlthe range for the human voice is 87 Hz - 1174 Hz. This covers the bass up to soprano. I've checked other websites and they are in good agreement with this frequency range.What puzzles me is that when you consider the crossover points (and their slopes), it seems that the above frequency range is not covered by the "midrange driver." In fact, for a typical three-way speakers, this range is usually / mostly covered by the bass driver.
I've had some experience in the past using mini monitors and passive subs and a Bryston crossover, but the Bryston does not correct the phase and my system lacked coherence and the subs sounded disconnected. (So much for a $2500 crossover, huh!) However, I still like the idea of using a good electronic crossover to divide the frequencies prior to amplification, then use the amp that is, IMO, most appropriate for that range (i.e., SET on vocals and horns, etc., SS on bass) and then use a driver appropriate for that range. In other words, I'd make sure the vocals are not directed to a bass driver and that low frequencies are not directed to a tweeter. Are there loudspeakers out there that are setup so you can bi- and tri-amp like this? If so, what type of crossover are folk using and how do you correct phase and achieve coherence?
Those of you who are doing this, do you plan to one day soon abandon your setup, sell all the gear, and go back to something simpler, like a single integrated amp and pair of full-range loudspeakers?
Interesting question and good discussion. Basically most of the points here I'd agree with. Consider this for pondering...the oboe is an instrument that does not produce the fundamental frequency only its harmonics but the ear hears the notes and fills in the missing fundamental.
...it seems to me that the best setup would be a 3-way loudspeaker where a single driver handled all of the midrange, with crossover points at, e.g., 70Hz and 3000Hz with appropriate slopes and phase shifts corrected for by physical offset of drivers. If this same loudspeaker were also tri-amp'able (I'm not sure if this is a word!), then we could choose a low-powered SS amp for the sub driver, and good SET amp for the midrange, and perhaps an OTL (or whatever) amp for the tweeter. Taking this one step further, if this same loudspeaker had no crossovers, we could use an active crossover and manually dial in the points and slopes and thus send a limited bandwidth to the amps so the amps don't have to work on the entire bandwidth, but only on a limited frequency range...
That's exactly what a high end 2-way (NOT a mini monitor or small bookshelf) plus high end subwoofer will do. Subwoofer positioning, continuously variable phase dial on the sub, and decent measurement software/equipment will help optimise the phase matching and integration between sub and 2-way. If you are going to cross over at around 70hz, it may as well be to a sub rather than a woofer in the main speaker box. The ability to locate the sub separately can also help reduce room problems. It will also allow a narrower baffle on the main speaker, remove the bass vibrations from the main cabinets and give greater LF extension and weight. Done right it will give a greater sense of effortlessness, scale and power. A purpose designed sealed speaker will often provide a cleaner, smoother integration with the sub. You can use external active crossovers if you desire, or the sub's own LPF and place HPF's on the inputs to the main amp. Approx 50% of amplification is consumed by the range below 300hz.
Tri-amping gets complicated and very expensive.