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How do you arrive at the dimensions for an H frame. The reason I ask is that I like my open baffle bass courtesy of Eminence Alpha 15's but am now embarking on a front horn project that will keep the open baffle bass.
I run my peerless woofers up to 334Hz, crossed at 24dB/octave
Also, the curve seems rather flat for such a wide array of drivers/alignments.
but do you run a house curve inside with your dipoles?
Did you have a chance to A/B your system with and without the rear firing tweeter?
8" pro sound woofer and a Morel MDT-20 tweeter mounted coaxially, in a single point-source alignment.
The system is true dipole up to about 6.5k.
here is a polar response plot... I'm missing the 90Degree measurement however. I did try getting some measurements at extreme angles but I had difficulty getting the microphone to pickup adequate response at 90degrees....
Seems like you could achieve more consistent directivity around 1khz by narrowing the baffle?
Here's a few quick pics.
Very nice... I like the nice small and simple configuration. I'm also interested in the point source coax idea.Do you have any measurement data?I used Fuzzy Measure Pro... Testing by ear and using the simple pink noise and a RTA was simply not adequate. I'm sooo happy that I bought the testing equipment because I was able to make big improvements to the setup much quicker with much more confidence. Highly recommend the testing equipment. BEST INVESTMENT EVER.
Not familiar with Fuzzy Measure Pro. Sounds interesting though.
I only use the RTA on the DEQ along with a calibrated measurement mic. I try to get the in-room response flat (+/- 1dB) from around 60Hz up through 15k Hz.
SL had an interesting evolution with and w/o the rear firing tweeter on his Orion. Initially he had no rear firing tweeter, then he added one with no attenuation, then reduced the output by a few dB, and now I believe it is back to being flat. I have spent many hours observing the rear wave and I believe there is no clear answer here. Allowing the highest frequencies to be truly dipole in nature seems to produce a more natural, reverberant sound.
The down side is that the stereo image can tend to wander and be smeared with a loss of focus. My current rig is only dipole till about 6.5k, and combined with the single point source alignment, produces a very realistic image.
http://www.supermegaultragroovy.com/products/FuzzMeasure/That was also my approach... before I got fuzzmeasure. I still use some attenuation of significant room modes at very low frequencies and a few other relatively small changes to help minimize room effects.But what I have found, now that I have better measurement capability, was that I am able to set the system response MUCH more accurately. I was completely surprised by the new measurements compared to the old pink noise. (not to mention I don't have to listen to pink noise for hours try to figure things out)
I'd like to bring up the 10" peerless x/o points once more. I played a lot with this last night. I too used to cross them at around 100Hz to the midwoofer. I really believe they can benefit from a higher crossover, with a steep slope for many reasons. First of all, the Peerless XLS (and XXLS) are one of the few subs that can be crossed fairly high. They exhibit lower harmonic and tall order distortion in the 50-300 Hz range then even two of the 6.5" drivers that you use, covering the same range. i.e, they can play louder and stay clean. They also move a lot more air due to their increased surface area and xmax and are more efficient. Lastly, they seem to have a lot more "presence" in this pass band then the two woofers would offer.
Since you have a DCX, it would be fairly easy to test this theory. To be fair, the relative loudness (including room gain and the benefit of your HFrame) should be the same when testing. Only provide power to the drivers in question. Listen to a variety of material first through the XLS and limit the passband to 100-300Hz, to be fair to your 6.5" drivers. Then do the same for your 6.5" drivers at the same relative loudness. In my experiemnts, I was convinced that the XLS easily out performed, allthough I was testing using a slightly different pair of mid woofers. I'm really interested in your findings here.
Also, just curious what you used to treat the rear walls. I'm guessing some type of foam?
Absolutely agree with everything you've brought up... but in my case the problem seems due to the configuration of my H-frame. I think they are too efficient for me to cross them much higher and they easily start to overpower the rest of the system. I suspect I would have very big hump in response above 100Hz with massive peak around 150.With my existing configuration I haven't been able to push the 6.5" drivers to any significant excursion levels (i.e. the point where they are moving very much). But sure, I can give it a go and publish a plot later tonight.I used a few acoustic ceiling tiles. Very cheap.
Since you have a DCX, it would be fairly easy to test this theory. To be fair, the relative loudness (including room gain and the benefit of your HFrame) should be the same when testing. Only provide power to the drivers in question. Listen to a variety of material first through the XLS and limit the passband to 100-300Hz
Just for grins and giggles, i wonder how your same configuration would fair in a flat panel instead of H-Frame, since you dont seem to need the output down low
OK... just for you I performed the following test:I set the Dual 10" to have no crossoverI turned off the dipole EQ.I ran a sweep from 20Hz to 500Hz.
Part of my assumption in suggesting a flat panel was in thinking you werent too concerned with the output at 20Hz, since you're also using a separate sub.
By shifting the XLS's band higher (and effectively moving everything else up a notch) I thought you might be able to take advantage of having each driver produce sound only in their ideal range , i.e., lowest possible distortion, etc.
My latest experiment involves A/B'ing my DEQ with a (dare I say it) Rane 31 band old school analog EQ that I picked up on ebay for $35
It's also interesting that with the advent of products like miniDSP, it easier for mass manufacturers to consider producing "out-of-the-box" dipoles that people can simply plug-in and enjoy.