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I am always keen to learn so please educate me as to why you have made the following statement :-QuoteRegardless of how many you put in a line, you will not increase the output levels in the top octave. You will still have the same output as a single unit. So if one unit will output 80db with a 1 watt input (as seen in the measured responses) and you are getting 106db in the lower ranges then you already have a variance of 36db.I am sorry to say that the above statement does not make much sense to me as I am not sure where you get the 80 db and 106 db figures from, although I have to say that I have had a couple of glasses of wine with my evening meal.
Regardless of how many you put in a line, you will not increase the output levels in the top octave. You will still have the same output as a single unit. So if one unit will output 80db with a 1 watt input (as seen in the measured responses) and you are getting 106db in the lower ranges then you already have a variance of 36db.
I think adding a horn in front of each driver would be a good solution.and it's not too complicated to build if rectangular horns are used.
Danny, if horn loads each driver to say 1khz, how can it create problems above that frequency?
But I feel this test Mr. Danny made are valid only to this loudspeaker type/brand, seems it have a xover and tweeter, it is not a FR as the B200. Certainly this test is a good example of what can happen.
I thought lower frequencies don't cancel each other that easily. plus horn provides directivity. so, Danny, why did you design arrays with multiple tweeters then?
If all LAs have this CTC problem, what is the Filter Corretive suited ??
Use ribbon tweeters and cross low enough to the woofers so that they will not comb in the listening area????
So, how do I know what frequencies will couple and what frequencies will cancel each other out?I may just build horns for appropriate coupling frequency...so, do those stacked planars actually increase high frequency sensitivity?sorry to bug you Danny. you are just providing some very useful information, which is not easy to find.