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Quote from: Daygloworange on 1 Mar 2008, 11:27 pmQuoteI've worked with the planars in question and know what they are capable of. I'm just trying to help someone avoid buying the wrong drivers to use with them. No, it's a thinly veiled attempt to bash. Your intent is to claim it's a misconception that you can cross over to a planar at a low frequency, and that it is a mistake.He was refering specifically to the driver that the original poster asked about, not to any other.Denny, your attempts here to goad Rick are noted, and not appreciated. If you continue with this, your account will be disabled.
QuoteI've worked with the planars in question and know what they are capable of. I'm just trying to help someone avoid buying the wrong drivers to use with them. No, it's a thinly veiled attempt to bash. Your intent is to claim it's a misconception that you can cross over to a planar at a low frequency, and that it is a mistake.
I've worked with the planars in question and know what they are capable of. I'm just trying to help someone avoid buying the wrong drivers to use with them.
I've chuckled a lot while reading this thread. I've built dozens of speakers designed by Rick, Dennis Murphy, Jon Marsh and Curt Campbell. I am friends with and respect them all. They all share one common trait in speaker design, they follow the laws of physics. I profess to NOT be a crossover guru but there are some elementary basics that you learn immediately if you do any DIY speaker building. Call it crossover design 101 if you will. It is very apparent that while Rick is trying to talk about the technical aspect of the OP question, the responses to his posts are fanboys who do not understand crossover design.Whether you have one driver or 100, the the low frequency or F3 point does NOT go lower. Multiple drivers increase the SPL output by 6 DB every time you connect two drivers in parallel but it cuts the impedance in half. Connect them in series and it doubles the impedance but doesn't increase the SPL. F3 remains the same. That is basic physics. So, if you have a driver that has a F3 of 60 Hz. for example and you want to get output from that driver at 20 Hz. you would have to reduce the output to the corresponding level that driver would be at if measured at 20 Hz. The xmax of the driver comes into question because it takes a LOT of xmax to achieve low frequencies at any volume. So, you take multiple drivers and wire them to increase SPL while still maintaining decent impedance and then reduce the upper output of the woofers frequency response to level it to the point where there is 20 Hz. output. Here are the questions. Since this is so simple, why doesn't everyone in the speaker business do that? It's easy to do with an active crossover but when a passive crossover is involved, physics rears it's ugly head. Since I'm not a crossover designer, here's my suggestion. Since many of you think Rick is biased, post this question on the PE board or in the Mission Possible section of the HT Guide. Simply ask why it's not a good idea to reduce the output of the woofer circuit in a passive crossover to lower the F3. Regarding BG and Dayton drivers. They are vastly different. The only thing they share in common is that they're planar drivers. The Neo8 is essentially comparable to a 2" mid dome in frequency response and are best used as a mid range rather than a tweeter. The response can be reduced to extend the top end extension at the sacrifice of sensitivity. The Dayton will not tolerant low crossover points. It wasn't designed for it. It's a drive that will sound much better with a 3K or higher crossover than a 2K. This is all simple physics as it relates to speaker design. I respectfully suggest that the folks that want to argue crossover and driver merits invest in some of the speaker design books so they'll understand how it all works and can offer intelligent responses. Best regards,Jim
Quote from: Rick Craig on 1 Mar 2008, 09:34 pmThe same acoustic principles apply to the low frequency extension for 1 or 100 woofers. Making a claim that a 6-7" woofer in a 2-way array will have 20's extension comparable to say a 10" or 12" driver is misleading and utter BS.Apparently not according to owners and reviewers of the GR LS-6, reporting in-room measurements down into the high teens.
The same acoustic principles apply to the low frequency extension for 1 or 100 woofers. Making a claim that a 6-7" woofer in a 2-way array will have 20's extension comparable to say a 10" or 12" driver is misleading and utter BS.
This is really interesting.... Quote from: Rick Craig on 1 Mar 2008, 09:34 pmThe amount of drivers has no bearing on how low a planar should be crossed. The resonance is the same regardless whether you have 1 or 100 of them and the resulting distortion will help define the best place to cross them. Really?? The amount of drivers used has no bearing on crossover point and how far down in output the distortion is? Are you kidding me? Quote The same acoustic principles apply to the low frequency extension for 1 or 100 woofers.Really?? Physics tells us that even a 3" driver will play (say) 20 Hz. It will do so with less distortion than a large woofer. It just won't have any output because it's not displacing enough air through surface area and excursion. Add 100 of those same 3" drivers, you add surface area, without having to increase excursion (keeping distortion low), and suddenly you are increasing the output at 20 Hz.I call that adding low frequency extension . By increasing the number of drivers, you have more surface area, therefore more output at any given frequency. It's not even rocket science.QuoteYou missquoted me.I fail to see where.QuoteI've worked with the planars in question and know what they are capable of. I'm just trying to help someone avoid buying the wrong drivers to use with them. No, it's a thinly veiled attempt to bash. Your intent is to claim it's a misconception that you can cross over to a planar at a low frequency, and that it is a mistake.QuoteMaking a claim that a 6-7" woofer in a 2-way array will have 20's extension comparable to say a 10" or 12" driver is misleading and utter BS.Really?? How many 6" or 7" woofers would it take to equal the surface area of a 10" or 12" woofer?We've been over this:http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=45051.20Rick, you've clearly got LS-6 and LS-9 envy. You call what it is capable of, utter BS.I can't believe you'd actually post that. If I were you, I would merely say that you don't think it's possible. That way you'd have some wiggle room. Now you don't.You claim it's not possible to get extension into the 20's with a 6" or 7" woofer.That would make Danny a fraud, and all the experienced audiophiles who have heard the speaker and claimed it will play in the 20's and lower, delusion, and a fraud as well.How sure are you of yourself? I can tell you, I've had the LS-9 designed line arrays right next to my PR subwoofer that will play flat to 25Hz(in room), and run a recording I engineered that has frequencies into the low teens, and possibly lower, and I can tell you for sure that they will play lower than 20Hz.Do you want to call me a liar?As it stands now, your positions are meaningless. You haven't even heard the LS line arrays and what is possible. If you did, you wouldn't be talking.Why didn't you go to hear the LS-6's and LS-9's when you were at RMAF 2007 and hear for yourself? Why didn't you prove it to yourself first, whether they are capable or not?I can post reviews of the LS series line arrays, would you like to explain to those experienced audiophiles how full of BS they are?Cheers
The amount of drivers has no bearing on how low a planar should be crossed. The resonance is the same regardless whether you have 1 or 100 of them and the resulting distortion will help define the best place to cross them.
The same acoustic principles apply to the low frequency extension for 1 or 100 woofers.
You missquoted me.
Making a claim that a 6-7" woofer in a 2-way array will have 20's extension comparable to say a 10" or 12" driver is misleading and utter BS.
Regardless what a biased competitor of the LS6/LS9 line array says, these will play well into the low 30's and (in the case of the LS9) into the 20's. I have heard them. He has not.
Very impressive! Both the FR graph and the cabinets.
This is a common misconception and I've seen other commercial array designs that make the same mistake.
It is very apparent that while Rick is trying to talk about the technical aspect of the OP question, the responses to his posts are fanboys who do not understand crossover design.
The driver C-T-C spacing of the 6" woofers is the problem and because of that the planar would have to be crossed lower. With the PT2 you really cannot go low enough to make a smooth transition over to the woofers.
The amount of drivers has no bearing on how low a planar should be crossed... The same acoustic principles apply to the low frequency extension for 1 or 100 woofers. Making a claim that a 6-7" woofer in a 2-way array will have 20's extension comparable to say a 10" or 12" driver is misleading and utter BS.
Whether you have one driver or 100, the the low frequency or F3 point does NOT go lower.
The Neo8 is essentially comparable to a 2" mid dome in frequency response and are best used as a mid range rather than a tweeter.
The in-room measurements that have been quoted don't accurately reflect the true bass extension of the woofers.
The only way to do a fair and accurate comparison is to do a nearfield test that correctly sums the output of the port and woofer.
But those woofers won't give you the same bottom end extension that a larger driver will unless you add a massive amount of active equalization.
It's easy to do with an active crossover but when a passive crossover is involved, physics rears it's ugly head. Since I'm not a crossover designer, here's my suggestion.
I'm not talking about non-linear behavior but the inherent low frequency resonances that are present in a planar driver regardless of the amount of drivers. You can see them by looking at impedance curves as well as with distortion tests. When you cross too close to / or below them you can have audible distortion and adding more drivers won't make it go away. This is true with ribbons or planar drivers.
nearfield tests for bass extension are widely used and accepted in the industry as being the most accurate way to determine the actual bass extension of a system.
Well, not being a professional, I can state my opinion . This still looks like one manufacturer criticizing another ones products- and in this case, having heard the LS9's I can categorically state that the one quoting the laws of physics regarding what a 6" driver will do is absolutely incorrect. My suspicion is that it was an attempt to bash a competitor for personal gain and therefore constitutes unethical behavior.