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Sonny,The easiest (not necessarily optimal) way to tame the tweet would be to increase R1, the 1.5 Ohm resistor.
Quote from: Occam on 17 Oct 2007, 02:17 amSonny,The easiest (not necessarily optimal) way to tame the tweet would be to increase R1, the 1.5 Ohm resistor.That's what I was going to suggest But why did you move that 6.8uF cap up to the tweeter circuit? You very likely messed with the balance that the original designer had in mind. Was it too bright before? Was that your first attempt to adjust things? If "yes" then I would suggest putting it back the way it was and play with R1.Enjoy,Bob
Yes, by moving that cap into the tweeter circuit you've added an additional phase change that wasn't there in the original circuit. That could easily explain the difference in what you're hearing. I'm not at home now or I could plot the freq/phase responses for you and try to post them so you could see what changed.BTW, it may help to simplify things by forgetting the components that are parallel to the mid and bass drivers. I don't mean physically remove them, just don't worry about them for now. They're only there for impedance correction.
Sonny,did the designer recommend removing that 22 ohm resistor, R2? Seems to me that R1 and R2 are functioning as an L-pad. Without the Z value of the tweeter it is not possible to know what the attenuation is. Removing that resistor, R2, could make the tweeter sound pretty hot.
Unless I'm reading the schematic wrong, the first x-over has the two 6.8uF capacitors for the tweeter in parallel, effectively making it a 13.6uF cap. In the 2nd x-over, the 6.8uF caps are in series, making them a 3.4uF capacitor. Which means the x-over frequency you have now is a lot lower than in the original, which means your tweeter's getting flopped around too much and distorting. Try yanking out one of the 6.8uF caps in your current x-over and see if things get better.