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Quote from: johnk... on 1 Apr 2007, 03:07 pmI try to stay active in some DIY forums, but it tries my patients at time.I thought your patients were the DIY folks. Hmm Quote from: JohninCR on 1 Apr 2007, 06:05 pmDavey, we're still waiting for the measurements you promised months ago John, I still don't see a single solitary measurement from you. The OB/RLH/worlds only,etc,etc? That tapered H baffle mid (I think you called it a waveguide mid)? What ever happened to proving all the measurement geeks wrong? What about your promise to me?Quote from: JohninCR on 1 Apr 2007, 08:17 pmI much prefer when I get results that agree with the theoreticalI still have no idea how you do that without measuring C'mon John, point a mic at one of those contraptions of yours so we can see what's really going on cheers,AJ
I try to stay active in some DIY forums, but it tries my patients at time.
Davey, we're still waiting for the measurements you promised months ago
I much prefer when I get results that agree with the theoretical
Here's my advice for what it's worth, since the number crunchers don't think I know what I'm talking about: [...]2. Set your goals in terms of bass extension and SPL, along with a baffle size you can live with. Your listening habits and musical tastes are key in setting your goals. Then you can plug that info and driver Sd into DipoleSPLmax, and you can quickly back into what you need in the way of woofers.3. Woofer selection is going to determine what kind of fullranger you need. If you need a lot of deep bass, then your woofers will be of a type that can't play very high, so you need a higher Q main driver which will reach down to the 100hz range. This is where Martin's initial OB attempt broke down despite his "afternoon" optimizing simulations. Those Dayton subwoofer type drivers simply weren't up to the task of blending with his Lowthers that start rolling off much higher than a typically recommended OB driver. If you're set on using low Q fullrangers, then you have 2 choices, pro type woofers or multiple small woofers, both of which can be used higher in frequency, but you can forget about deep bass because the Fs is too high.
I can see two possible variatons if that is a problem ...: - flare the drivers cut-out towards the back e.g. liniarily, whatever. - Leave them as they are and count for the U-cavity waveguide for the woofers. OTOH leave the FR on a "thin" baffle on top and avoid that alltogether.
I remember a remark of Bert Doppenberg that the tube cavity in the Quasar is essential for raising the low end SPL of the FR. He explicitly voted against widening it.
Well, I appologize for that but I quoted wrong diam for the cut-out. It is actually 350 mm for the BD15 woofer.Sorry for that
Regarding Rudolf's comment. I would not recomment trying to use a cavity resonance of this type to boost the low end. This isn't a TL and the resonance it far too high.
Come to think of it, there are other issues with the Quasar design I haven't thought about:First, the thickness of the baffle should be counted twice than above: Once from the back of the cone to the back of the baffle and then again to the front. Interesting to note that this doubling was not noted on Linkwitz site when he makes the equivalence from model f to model g open baffles (here: http://www.linkwitzlab.com/models.htm).Second, and more importantly, if the drivers are mounted flush with the front baffle and if the cut-out through the baffle is cylindrical, then the thickness of the baffle will form a cavity that would resonate and modulate the back wave accordingly. IOW all the drivers would be placed into U-frames (albeit pretty shallow ones). The question is:Given that the tube cavity is shallow enough (156 mm in the Quasar case) compared to the diameter (242 mm) can the cavity effect can be ignored ? Note that U frames models I've seen (on Linkwitz site and on the musicanddesign.com) are under the assumption that the cylinder diameter is much smaller than the tube length, which is not the case here. Also, the 156 mm "tube" depth here is the quarter wave for 550 Hz... I can see two possible variatons if that is a problem (will now go and re-check the models): - flare the drivers cut-out towards the back e.g. liniarily, whatever. - Leave them as they are and count for the U-cavity waveguide for the woofers. OTOH leave the FR on a "thin" baffle on top and avoid that alltogether.Any thoughts ?
I have been thinking about this issue for a few days and wondering if the baffle thickness really does play a part in the OB design and if the Quasar concept would indeed behave differently compared to a flat OB made from 3/4 inch plywood. So I added the thickness of the baffle as a variable in one of my OB worksheets and ran a few simulations.
When you say you accounted for the thickness of the baffle and compared it with a flat OB, how exactly did you account for that?
In this case if we ignore any resonances in the tube cavities (and that's quite an assumption) the baffle of thickness D would be equivalent with a flat baffle with back wings of same depth (and ignoring any resonances in the latter too ).
The new worksheets calculate and plot the response up to 1 kHz. I have versions that go as high as 10 kHz but the run times become too long for iterating a design.