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It seems to me (as an amateur) that, given that an impedance-correction circuit flattens the otherwise-rising driver impedance (which increases with frequency), it is absolutely necessary for a passive XO ... as otherwise the nominal X ohms DCR which sets the XO component values according to the standard Butterworth etc. filter formulae, will vary with frequency (so the theorectical filter slope will not be achieved in real life).
However, it seems to me that an impedance-correction circuit is just as necessary for an active setup. (Hence that adjustment, Hugh, which you made for marcus's Orion mid-range driver?) Otherwise the amount of power which the amp is able to put out will vary widely with frequency, if the impedance ranges widely (like from 1.5R to 45R)? Which won't sound any good at all!
I mean, the power the amp puts out will vary widely with frequency just due to the music signal itself.se
Thanks, Steve ... but I'm afraid I don't quite understand what you're trying to say, here. OK, my logic goes as follows:1. If an amp can put out 100w rms into 8 ohms then it can produce a max of +/- 'X' volts rms at the output terminals. (Sorry, I forget the maths. )2. If it was powering a driver whose impedance was a constant 8 ohms then the rated input voltage would deliver the same 'X' output voltage at all frequencies.3. However, if the driver's impedance has risen to 16 ohms at 10Kz then the amp is not capable of outputting 'X' volts at 10Khz ... for the same input signal level, the output voltage will be considerable less (half? quarter?).4. Thus the driver is less loud at 10Khz than it is at 1Khz ... which is not very good! 5. Hence, an impedance-correction circuit is required to smooth the impedance of the driver, so that it registers a constant impedance at all frequencies ... so that the amplifier produces a constand 'X' volts at all frequencies.How is the above logic flawed?
Thanks Steve, you explained it well. And your work is artisan quality, if I didn't already remark on it!
Disregarding the Back EMF- Inductance semantics thing (reactance happens) the concept was to explore ways to make a speaker appear more resistive and less reactive. I'll collect some ideas sit and think about them and through out the bad ones. Al tho given the right drivers the simplicity of just adding resisters (perhaps 32ga speaker wire) has some KISS appeal.
Quote from: Joules on 7 Nov 2007, 12:51 pmDisregarding the Back EMF- Inductance semantics thing (reactance happens) the concept was to explore ways to make a speaker appear more resistive and less reactive. I'll collect some ideas sit and think about them and through out the bad ones. Al tho given the right drivers the simplicity of just adding resisters (perhaps 32ga speaker wire) has some KISS appeal.Yeah, but simply adding resistors won't really do much toward making the speaker appear more resistive unless your resistances are much greater than the reactances. And given that the impedance at resonance can be upwards of 100 ohms for some speakers, you're going to need so much resistance not only will you end up with a horribly inefficient speaker, but you're also going to end up with a huge peak in bass response due to the speaker's mechanical Q (Qms).You've heard the phrase "fight fire with fire"? Well it's rather the same here. Fight reactance with reactance. This come about from the fact that capacitance and inductance are ultimately opposites of each other. So if you want to null capacitive reactance, you use inductive reactance and vice versa.se
It has always been a point of debate as to weather to apply a Zobel to a driver that has been connected directly to an amplifier. The overall opinions is inconclusive (as with eveything else in audio) when considering theory and subjectivity.
In my opinion, it is ALWAYS worth adding a zobel. Why? Because, consistent with Steve's line about 'fighting fire with fire', the Zobel effectively reverses the phase shift introduced by the voice coil inductance, and in so doing, makes the driver look like a pure resistance electrically.This means the amp sees very little phase shift across the driver.In turn, this means voltage and current are in step, and this is GOOD for the feedback loop, enhancing stability and making the amp smile......So, always use a Zobel. Oh, and when you listen to an active system with and without Zobels on the drivers you hear quite marked differences in the imaging area. This is because driver phase shifts have strong influence around crossover on gnfb amps, where all the spatial information is found, that vital first watt.Cheers,Hugh
Joules (David),You made this very sharp comment:QuoteIt has always been a point of debate as to weather to apply a Zobel to a driver that has been connected directly to an amplifier. The overall opinions is inconclusive (as with eveything else in audio) when considering theory and subjectivity. In my opinion, it is ALWAYS worth adding a zobel. Why? Because, consistent with Steve's line about 'fighting fire with fire', the Zobel effectively reverses the phase shift introduced by the voice coil inductance, and in so doing, makes the driver look like a pure resistance electrically.This means the amp sees very little phase shift across the driver.In turn, this means voltage and current are in step, and this is GOOD for the feedback loop, enhancing stability and making the amp smile......So, always use a Zobel. Oh, and when you listen to an active system with and without Zobels on the drivers you hear quite marked differences in the imaging area. This is because driver phase shifts have strong influence around crossover on gnfb amps, where all the spatial information is found, that vital first watt.CheerHugh