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Methinks this needs a rethink.OK, so the tweeter is physically forward of the woofer and needs to be delayed, yes? Now, turn the baffle around. The tweeter is now behind the woofer and it is the woofer which needs delay. It would take quite the circuit to solve that pickle. Of course physical alignment solves the problem without the paradox.
Thanks for the writeup, that was pretty helpful. I'm interested in what other baffle configurations you tried with the tweeter. Also, the back of the cutout - is that similar to the photos you'd sent me when we were discussing this, or did you try some other things as well?
I'm not trying to get dipole radiation down below 100Hz or so. I'm going to use multiple monopole subs (at least two, maybe three).
The challenge seems to be 'how to maintain good polar response from a midrange driver run between 100Hz and the crossover to the tweeter'.
Using something like the BG Neo 2 or the majority of other tweeters would seem to lead you down the path of a three way or a two way with multiple smaller midrange drivers due to the still relatively high XO point that you need. Both seem to be compromises but maybe they are required. Is it possible to identify a design that would not compromise max spl (due to displacement limitation) whilst allow a two way, two driver dipole above 100Hz? By my rough in my head calculations we would seem to need a single driver capable of 700Hz to 20kHz, crossed over to something like Linkwitz uses, an 8" driver?
DannyNot an issue to place subs where you want them by time delaying the mains, phase cancellation is an issue if you aren't though, I understand that.
understand your point about displacement limitations from the 100Hz XO point, though that is what I have in the Orions at the moment with the 8" driver and there is no displacement issue.
The problem though with that size of driver though is maintaining smooth polar response until the handoff to the tweeter, which AFAIK is 1.4k in the Orion.
So that is why you suggest multiple smaller drivers, in a 2.5 way type configuration. Maybe that is the best answer.
The other approach would seem to be using something like a Beyma TPL150 and crossing over lower. Still if we use a 6" driver we would sacrifice some SPL unless we experiment with higher XO to the mains from the subs, maybe 120Hz. I have read though that we start to localize bass at these frequencies so that may not be the best idea....
Why would I worry anyway about cancellation at other points apart from the prime listening position?
Re sensitivity, don't really care, that's what big amps are for
I don't understand your last point. If you place a measurement mic at the listening position and that shows no cancellation because you have time delayed your subs, then that is what you hear. Of course that is a combination of the direct sound and reflected sound, but I don't see what that has to do with worrying about cancellation at other points apart from the listening position. ANY time you have two sound sources at different distances you will get cancellation. Whether they are bass units under the mid/tweeter or separate subs make no difference.
If you measure your dipole speakers in room you will see a suckout probably centered on 80hz if your speakers are 4ft from the back wall. If the difference between the direct and indirect path lengths (where path length is the distance the sound has to travel) is equal to half a wavelength then the two sound waves will combine destructively and a notch in the frequency response will occur. The frequency that interference occurs at can be calculated through application of the wavelength formula as follows: cancellation frequency = speed of sound / (2 * path length difference). That is what I am trying to avoid by separating out the low bass units and putting them against boundaries. I don't believe I have created any new problems that cannot be fixed through DSP based time delay. But maybe I am wrong, I would like to learn why.
In terms of compromises, I would rather compromise on efficiency in terms of SPL per watt than compromise on speaker design, at least in a home setting where achieving very loud SPL levels is not difficult, even with insensitive speakers. There are many very powerful amps available cheaply these days and anyway you are much more likely to run out of displacement than you are amplifier power, especially in an active system where each amp is only feeding one driver.
I tried something using 5 of my M-165X woofers (XBL^ motors) and a single Neo tweeter. The tweeter only crossed to the top woofer though. You run them all in series then by-pass all of the lower woofers with a cap value in the 56uF to 75uF range. You then just get the top woofer playing to the tweeter but all of them sharing the load in the lower ranges.
Danny,Just wondering if you could clarify for me how this is wired? Does the woofer to tweeter x-over go across all five of the series wired woofers and the cap then parallels the 4 lower woofers? Any chance you could post a diagram or sketch and maybe elaborate a bit on how it works?ThanksSean
Is it possible to identify a design that would not compromise max spl (due to displacement limitation) whilst allow a two way, two driver dipole above 100Hz?