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And don't even get started on smoothing!
I'm pretty used to those 5db scales myself and that response looks pretty good to me.
Quote from: Danny on 28 Oct 2007, 03:37 amI'm pretty used to those 5db scales myself and that response looks pretty good to me. Thanks Danny.... you cannot do much about diffraction ripples. Move off axis 15 degrees and they mostly go away.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 28 Oct 2007, 04:04 amQuote from: Danny on 28 Oct 2007, 03:37 amI'm pretty used to those 5db scales myself and that response looks pretty good to me. Thanks Danny.... you cannot do much about diffraction ripples. Move off axis 15 degrees and they mostly go away.Mr. Haskins,I've found, through extensive research, that by moving the on-off switch approximately 45 degrees, you can make them completely disappear.A lot of people, who are not Audio Professionals, lack the experience and knowledge to understand these esoteric details. Best Regards,TerryO
Just imagine what that graph would look like at 5 dB/division!
Quote from: JohnR on 28 Oct 2007, 12:00 amAnd don't even get started on smoothing! I'd say 1/3rd octave is legit. If you want to really strut your stuff 1/6th octave is fine. For crossover work its terribly difficult to do much with small aberrations in the frequency response so anything with more resolution than 1/6th octave is of limited use. Our ears have some smoothing built into them so using it on measurements is legit because its reflective of what we actually hear. Erroneous data is just as bad as wrong data.
I agree... there are some things I don't post for that reason. There is such a thing as too much information. I don't post Klippel measurements because you really need to know what your doing to interpret the data. Most of my competitors don't know how to read them, how is a consumer going to get meaningful information from them?Distortion measurements are another one. Customers don't understand them and for transducers, they are relatively high (maybe x100) compared to what people see from amps and other components. Another factor is that you need a chamber to do valid distortion measurements. I'm borrowing one next week for some measurements of my speakers but its not something that I typically have available for use, nor do 99% of the speaker designers. So... the data by itself is meaningless. It has to have context before consumers can use it.