First, I just thought I'd make it clear to others that only your first two responses were replies to my points. The remaining were for Mark, I believe. You forgot to differentiate that.
dlr, Or am I wrong in my understanding of the material of the phase plug?
It's NOT a phase plug at all. It's just a dust cap. The shape is a little longer (or taller) than most. It yielded the best overall response of all those that were tested. He was just being derogatory. There is a picture of the driver in my avatar.
Ah. I could not see enough detail in any photos to make that clear. I had earlier mentioned that a non-metallic one would still eliminate the air space resonance underneath, with which you agreed (middle of page 3). That implied a true phase plug attached to the pole-piece, therefore my continued assumption that it was a true phase plug. That is in fact not the case, since it's not a phase plug. It would help if you would make corrections such as that at the time, to prevent any further confusion.
With this additional information (not a phase plug), it changes the perspective a bit. Some might think it to be a fake phase plug, since for all intents and purposes it does not operate as a phase plug at all, but certainly has the appearance of being one. I thought it to be one due to the limitations of the photos on-line. My original assumption that it was a real phase plug was wrong, as you very emphatically stated above. Thank you for correcting that mis-perception now. I see John's comment as not being the egregious slight that you took it to be. It's not a real phase plug. Maybe if he had simply said that, rather than use the word fake, you wouldn't have been upset.
So it's as you state, a dust cap. A somewhat unusually shaped one, yes, but it offers no benefits of a real phase plug. The one benefit would apparently be to slightly alter the output at higher frequencies since it is part of the moving mass along with the diaphragm, but its shape may aid in the upper ranges.
Yes, while I agree with you here, what is seen at 5.5K is not a simple "rising response". It is very characteristic of a resonance. I'm not aware of any other way for a very symmetric peak such as that to exist in a raw driver. If you disagree, please explain exactly what creates that peak, specifically in the structure of the driver.
Yes there is a peak there caused by a resonance. But the decay rate of the resonance is very fast and little stored energy is there. The decay rate is faster and looks cleaner than the other two drivers tested and compared to. All looked good, but mine was the one made to look bad in the comments. Again his attitude towards me may have had everything to do with that.
Here's where I have to disagree on the analysis. I see that peak to be the worst of the three (although all three have issues) for two reasons. First, it has the highest Q. The others can be much more easily corrected in the crossover. Once corrected in this fashion, the resonance is no longer an issue, since the stored-energy issue reverts to that of the bandpass of the driver/XO combination. The easier it is to trap, the less complicate the XO may need to be.
Second, any peaks in the raw driver response will tend to magnify all harmonics of any distortion that fall on or near the peak. Motor generated distortion is not controllable by the XO, other than one that may limit excursion at the low end. Any distortion that is generated will be magnified by that peak. It's an undeniable fact of drivers. That's of course why some do not like hard-coned drivers. Cross lower and the linear distortion may be reduced in some ways, but the non-linear motor distortion cannot be. Any music signal in the middle of the passband that has linear harmonic distortions that coincide with the 5.5K peak will be amplified.
If that peak is around 5.5K, then it will coincide with any signal that has any harmonic component that is a multiple, e.g. motor distortion that is at 1833Hz will have a third harmonic component precisely at 5.5K. Any music that has content at 2750Hz will have some amount of second harmonic distortion precisely at 5.5K.
The other drivers will suffer as well, so it would take some distortion measurements to distinguish which one is better controlled. You can't just look at the FR or CSD to determine this, you know that.
The more this is analyzed, the more I think that picking a fight with John was ill-advised.