0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 310192 times.
but my guess is that some crossovers are more efficient than others, at least this is what Steve Deckert (Decware) and Israel Blume (Coincident) led me to believe.
Turkey, I totally agree with you, I would buy the Nathans in a heartbeat over the Orions, As for the upgraded parts, cujobobs explanation says it all. It is just a matter of what the cost would be for the parts as opposed to what you will gain from that cost.
I wonder what Dr. Geddes response to upgraded crossover parts would be...I still question whether changing a few caps would really net a worthwhile result.
He would just say they're not cost-effective.
Exactly. If you are going to play with crossover parts then you are on your own, as I was. And to be honest, I asked him about tolerances of parts. It didn't have to be 1% or something ridiculous like that as far as he was concerned. He stated that the room would change the response far more than small crossover intolerances. Still, I got 1% tolerances on my parts. And as I have stated earlier, I do not think that the difference in performance was comensurate with the amount of money I spent. It was the first time I have ever had this occur in my system, it just goes to show you that the Abbey is a damn good design stock. Tells you a lot about controlled directivity, waveguide design, and optimization of the directivities between the woofer and tweeter at the crossover point. Earl has got it set.Anand.Anand.
HI, thanks - not sure how I missed that, but it doesn't explain the theory - What I'm looking for is those details.[Edit - just saw you added some info - will look at those.]
John, it is probably in his book. Then again there might not be a precise method.
Oh yes and the nicest thing about the multiple sub approach is that it works for ALL types of speakers not just Geddes speakers.
Is it true that I don't see how it's a statistical problem. Three subs and a few sparsely-distributed modes...