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Quote from: Rudolf on 3 Feb 2009, 11:06 pmBTW: The 7" midrange driver in my own dipole speaker has 5,5 mm.What is it?
BTW: The 7" midrange driver in my own dipole speaker has 5,5 mm.
Thanks. Assuming I did the math right back when I built my speakers, I figured I'd be limited by the 3.5W output of my SET amp before I'd hit the excursion limit on my Audax, especially given my high-ish 500Hz XO frequency.But I agree with you, and if I were starting from scratch I'd use a different midrange driver. I only used this one because I already had it.
I guess you are listening at quite moderate volume levels.
I'm guessing that Saurav's baffle is 10" wide.
The spreadsheet predicts a max SPL of 120dB @ 500Hz. But a quick reading of the accompanying text, John uses steep slopes to further protect the midrange.
Looking at max SPL of my woofers, if I want to use a U frame up to 500Hz, I can reach 110dB as low as 60hz.If I where to use my 10" mid, I could crossover at 200Hz and reach 110dB at 40Hz with a 30cm depth.By those numbers alone, I'm leaning toward the 10" mid.Currently I'm listening to Ellis 1801s with a 10" Velodyne servo sub. The bass performance of the tapered H was much more to my liking but I have yet to try and model it for comparison purposes.
I take it that the spreadsheet being discussed is the Linkwitz maxspl...or somesuch. If so, it should be noted it overestimates excursion because it doesn't take a ground plane into consideration in its calculations. The presence of your floor gives you an additional ~6dB to work with. On top of this, you need to remember that you are listening in stereo; therefore, you can add another 6dB of headroom.If you are using a U-frame, where you only need to worry about one pipe resonance (in the back), you might think about using something like rockwool to help damp the resonance out. Even then, I wouldn't recommend trying to reach 500 Hz. I could be wrong...I've never tried going that high.
Why do you feel 500Hz would be too high?
Quote from: pedroskova on 4 Feb 2009, 10:44 pmI take it that the spreadsheet being discussed is the Linkwitz maxspl...or somesuch. If so, it should be noted it overestimates excursion because it doesn't take a ground plane into consideration in its calculations. The presence of your floor gives you an additional ~6dB to work with. On top of this, you need to remember that you are listening in stereo; therefore, you can add another 6dB of headroom.If you are using a U-frame, where you only need to worry about one pipe resonance (in the back), you might think about using something like rockwool to help damp the resonance out. Even then, I wouldn't recommend trying to reach 500 Hz. I could be wrong...I've never tried going that high.I'm using John Kreskovsky's ABC Dipole. I may try Linkwitz's to see how it compares.John K's documentation does detail the damping of the u-frame which I'm planning to follow.With a 500Hz XO, I'd use a 12cm deep U-frame which puts the first dipole peak above 700Hz.Why do you feel 500Hz would be too high?
I thought the Linkwitz spreadsheet had a comment saying something like "If you're in 2pi, add 6dB". Also, he's estimating the excursion/output of his midrange, which won't benefit from the ground plane as much as his woofer(s) would, I think.
John K.'s accompanying documentation sets 110dB as a goal in his examples.I figured that it would be a safe number to use when trying to determine if I'd be running into excursion limits of my woofers.