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With the nearfield measuring technique (which in this case was a one second chirp pulse), won't many cycles of the rear wave, and rarefaction, reach the mic in the time it takes to make the (averaged) measurement?
How do you think that the response of equalized drivers (as Linkwitz uses) should be measured?
How should a high Qt unequalized driver be measured to ensure a flat response (i.e. that the Qt is indeed right)?
Sorry about all the questions, but issues of driver/baffle matching and baffle/room matching seem to be addressed differently amongst us open-bafflers.
Hi Rudolf,My point is not to disagree with your point about room influences, but to demonstrate that a series inductor can equalize close to the Fs, in spite of the impedance hump properties that would imply that it cannot.
We haven't really altered what the dipole baffle frequency response is when taken by the nearfield technique, so is it any less valid for determining the low frequency response of the baffle itself, separate to where, and in what room, and in whose house, it is?