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Well, I just found graphs of the P Audio drivers, they look a little scary to me in the upper frequencies.
1) If the problem is diffraction at the edges, I have trouble seeing why baffle width matters. It seems like the wider the baffle the further the edges are away and thus less likely to interfere with the on-axis waveform. This is hard for me to visualize.
2) Do you think a properly designed waveguide on just a tweeter might allow for a wider baffle on the tweeter. Thus still providing a smooth response, but extending the low end a bit more?
3) Does rounding of the edges help, and if so what do you recommend for baffle thickness and rounding?
Funny about the dipole peak. I read so much about it, see it in the sims, but don't often hear it or measure it - much.Could the room be filling in or killing a lot of the peak?
QuoteCould you also run a simulation for 35cm? The 12" driver is centered at 62,5cm not at 80cm btw.This looks VERY nice to me!!QuoteIf you can also set the driver specs in this software, those are Qt=0.6 and Fs=50hz with no crossover.This simulation is with an ideal driver (linear response from 0 to infinity). I can do simulations for specific drivers if I have the specific parameter set for Boxsim (which includes more than the TSP). It will be easier for you to estimate the Q induced drop off than for me to build even a minimised parameter set. Took me about three hours to get the "ideal driver" model running correctly.
Could you also run a simulation for 35cm? The 12" driver is centered at 62,5cm not at 80cm btw.
If you can also set the driver specs in this software, those are Qt=0.6 and Fs=50hz with no crossover.
Using two drivers changes things completely. I had to make the baffle larger and positions the drivers not parallel.Why do i want to use two drivers? Because i heard a pair of speakers built this way and they sounded wonderfully. It enriches the midrange.
This looks better above 1000hz to about 5khz. If you were to NOT use a crossover in front of these drivers, which of the two setups would you use?
Telstar, you heard two 12" drivers mounted one upon the other in OB without a crossover and they sounded wonderful to you? Our tastes in listening MUST be very different.
The Beta 12LTA is a 12" that works just great up to 6K, then you have to get out, or it gets ugly. Have heard the Beta 8 used in pairs for midrange up to 6K. Worked very well, yes indeed.
The Beta 12LTA is a 12" that works just great up to 6K, then you have to get out, or it gets ugly. Ask JBSpeakerman, he knows this driver well.Don't think I'd use two of them together tho....
Hmmmm..... good questions. I sure don't remember the Beta LTA beaming when used with the tweeter @ 6K. It is actaully an amazing midrange driver - not that you could tell by looking at it. Its sound is very dynamic and yet delicate and detailed at the same time. Almost electrostatic sounding, but more dynamic. Quite a surprise.Why not use 2? - uh..... comb filtering? I dunno, just doesn't seem like a good idea. Although perhaps it could work well if one was rolled off lower than the other. The nice Beta 8s I heard were done that way.Darn, now you've got me thinking.......
This one. It has a light purple cone, if that helps.http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?Partnumber=290-404I think Gary uses lots of rope caulk (window putty) on the baskets to tame them. No other treaments that I know of.
The Beta 12LTA is a 12" that works just great up to 6K, then you have to get out, or it gets ugly. Ask JBSpeakerman, he knows this driver well.Don't think I'd use two of them together tho....Have heard the Beta 8 used in pairs for midrange up to 6K. Worked very well, yes indeed. (Gary Pimm's system).
IIRC, Gary put a small inductor on the Beta 8 to flatten the rising response. Not really a crossover - just a gentle EQ. Hi pass is active - I think. But you should confirm that with him.He uses one of those big Hi-Vi planar tweeters up top. To my ears it had no "tweeter sound" at all - which is high praise coming from me.