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While the vertical separation of the drivers in each line of the line array plays a significant factor in the performance of an array, the horizontal spacing between the two lines needs to be minimized to reduce image shift as the sound transitions between the woofers and the tweeters. The design is essentially the same as if you designed a two drivers (woofer/tweeter) speaker that is placed horizontally. Care must be paid to minimize horizontal lobing from the side-by-side drivers. Some things to consider are the basic horizontal dispersion of the individual drivers that would ideally be similar and overlap to at least 30 degrees off axis. The two lines need to be located so that their horizontal center-to-center distance is less than a one wavelength at the crossover frequency. Finally, a higher order acoustic crossover may be necessary to minimize any driver interaction above and below the crossover point.
Do the same rules for vertical center-to-center placement of drivers (0.5 or 1.0 highest freq. wavelength) apply to the pair of woofer lines?I know Dr Griffin states in his white paper that horizontal distance between mid-woofer/tweeter lines is critical: QuoteWhile the vertical separation of the drivers in each line of the line array plays a significant factor in the performance of an array, the horizontal spacing between the two lines needs to be minimized to reduce image shift as the sound transitions between the woofers and the tweeters. The design is essentially the same as if you designed a two drivers (woofer/tweeter) speaker that is placed horizontally. Care must be paid to minimize horizontal lobing from the side-by-side drivers. Some things to consider are the basic horizontal dispersion of the individual drivers that would ideally be similar and overlap to at least 30 degrees off axis. The two lines need to be located so that their horizontal center-to-center distance is less than a one wavelength at the crossover frequency. Finally, a higher order acoustic crossover may be necessary to minimize any driver interaction above and below the crossover point.I get that both woofer lines are individually close enough to the planar/ribbon line, it's the distance from each other that I am trying to understand.
The spacing of the two woofer lines is important because it effects how they couple around the crossover point. The wavelength rules are affected not only by the woofer diameter but also the driver's dispersion.
Quote from: Rick Craig on 19 Aug 2009, 04:35 pmThe spacing of the two woofer lines is important because it effects how they couple around the crossover point. The wavelength rules are affected not only by the woofer diameter but also the driver's dispersion. Thanks for the response Rick, would you mind elaborating - if you have time and it's doesn't impinge on any proprietary work? I was originally going to ask if the two overlapping dispersion/radiating fields somehow sum, but couldn't even think of a way to form a question about it.
Thank you for the honest reply about design and I know the individual you are referring to, he's has very strong opinions about any line array design not his own. Well, strike that, he has strong opinions about his, too.In reality, I am never going to actually build an array myself. I just don't have to skills, dedication, and time to do so. I've learned this lesson after failed intentions of building SS & SET amps. I bought all the testing gear and never got around to doing it. With speakers, I have zero cabinetry skills/tools, and no desire to work up that learning curve. Let alone testing individual drivers, crossovers(active vs passive, digital vs analog), etc.Instead, I realize that I simply love doing the research. Learning everything I can about a particular approach/topology, then applying that knowledge towards picking the commercial product that best suits my needs. And finished aesthetics/workmanship means a lot to me, too.What got me thinking about underlying design approach to the Symmetricas is that there is a demo pair for sale right now. I'd rather pay more and buy a finished, fully tested and proven, design with a furniture grade quality, than save money and going DIY. I'd rather start playing music right away than waiting 6 months, a year, or even more on doing it myself - even if it costs me more.My current system is made up with high quality, small manufacturer, components(Art Audio, Cain & Cain, Museatex, Scheu Analog) and that's the approach I'd like to stick with for my next system upgrade.
Sorry for the confusion - I thought you were going the DIY route.
Do you really have to have such a long signature?
. Perhaps I should start over again and just ask what you find is the difference between the musical presentation of a single line like the Alexandrite & the dual line of the Symmetrica (besides bass extension & need for a subwoofer)
Quote from: JohnR on 3 Sep 2009, 12:47 pmDo you really have to have such a long signature?Does that make it more difficult for you to manage the site?