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Hoffman's Iron Law, described by Henry Kloss in the mid-1950s and later turned into an exact mathematical formula by engineers Thiele and Small, governs the behavior of woofers. Essentially, it says that a woofer's efficiency is proportional to the volume of its cabinet and the cube of the lowest frequency it can produce before losing relative level (aka the cutoff frequency). Take, for example, a woofer whose response is flat down to 40 hertz in a 2-cubic-foot enclosure. To make its response flat down to 20 Hz, you must either increase the cabinet volume by eight times (to 16 cubic feet) or use eight times the amount of amplifier power to achieve the same listening volume. Given these requirements, you can see how difficult it can be to get respectable low-frequency response from small "full-range" speakers.
90+dB/6 ohm minimum allows the use of lower powered amplifiers....in my case specifically lower powered tube amplifiers (say in the range of 20-50 wpc).
This seems to be a often requested product, monitors that are small, moderate efficiency and tame impedance curve. However, we must not forget Hoffman's iron law. I will quote a paragraph from a HT mag review that said it succintly:QuoteHoffman's Iron Law, described by Henry Kloss in the mid-1950s and later turned into an exact mathematical formula by engineers Thiele and Small, governs the behavior of woofers. Essentially, it says that a woofer's efficiency is proportional to the volume of its cabinet and the cube of the lowest frequency it can produce before losing relative level (aka the cutoff frequency). Take, for example, a woofer whose response is flat down to 40 hertz in a 2-cubic-foot enclosure. To make its response flat down to 20 Hz, you must either increase the cabinet volume by eight times (to 16 cubic feet) or use eight times the amount of amplifier power to achieve the same listening volume. Given these requirements, you can see how difficult it can be to get respectable low-frequency response from small "full-range" speakers. linkThose here who have read some of Dave Ellis's threads on subs and 3 ways will be reminded of the 'triangle' he likes to refer to. With apologies to Dave for murdering his words, I'll paraphrase. If you have a triangle with Small Size, High Efficiency, Extends Deep in the corners, choose any two you won't get the third. That is what Hoffman's iron law says. So what does this mean? It means that you have to give up a few octaves on bottom at minimum to acheive reasonably high efficiency with a small monitor, or you need to accept a very large speaker in your room.
Mike, are you at CES this year? If so what hotel and room?
Nope, decided to do RMAF yearly instead . . .
Quote from: Mike Dzurko on 9 Jan 2007, 11:37 pmNope, decided to do RMAF yearly instead . . . And all of us that attended RMAF are glad that you did. Lin