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I have made some very positive discoveries towards advancing on the sound produced by this technology and can assure you that a STORM IS BREWING!
One reason is better sound. Not just better---MUCH BETTER.
Come to think of it, you shouldn't get 6 dbs each time you double b/c you won't get twice the surface area. Man do I wish someone could take measurements. After I get a few projects done I'll make and take my own but perhaps this thread will be dead by then. Seems like the pace is slowing--which totally sucks b/c I think Patricks panels are very inspirational.Dan
Doug, that works if you don't account for impedance, but halving the impedance will also give 3dB thus 3+3=6 if you run parallel connections. Running each off it's own amp should work how you describe. Of course you can't do parallel infinitely or you'll fry your amp. Eventually you have to start adding some series connections depending on what your amp can do.Theoretically,1 driver=902 drivers in parallel=96 2 drivers in series=90and there are a numbers of ways this can all add up when you get to multiple drivers. That's why I was wondering what others have measured so we can know what we're going to get when we add more drivers. I think that the addition of regular drivers is well understood by most people who are into DIY audio, but this stuff is different. I don't know how the rules apply here. I know Ziggy says he's getting more efficiency by going with more exciters, but how much and at how many I don't know. It gets hard to make an informed decision and so far it looks like we're not far from square one with exciter understanding.Dan