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Behringer active crossover
"Wally" wrote in message k... Jim Lesurf wrote: The way I see it, the only thing measurements will tell me is whether sound I like has an even response, or a bumpy one. :-) It can also provide you with information which can be studied and used to indicate which further steps might (or might not) lead to further improvements, perhaps more marked than so far obtained. It can also provide a basis for you and others to assess if some other methods might yeald similar results with less fuss or expense, etc. Hence appropriate measurements, correctly interpreted, can tell you more than you assume. :-) Okay. See thread on driver resonances in isobaric pairings. :-) I'm not averse to measuring, as such. I'm just not terribly sure how to go about it, and not hugely keen to spend piles of cash on it. For example, I found a sound level meter in Maplin, but it's 70 quid - and only goes down to 300Hz. CPC does some that have a bigger range and at a good price. http://cpc.farnell.com Peter Scott |
Behringer active crossover
"Jim Lesurf" wrote If we ignore all the above complications and assume two speakers, each radiating *in phase* at the same level then the result at a listening location equidistant from both is a *6dB* rise. Not 3dB. I thought that was only if they were reproducing the same signal. "In phase" may imply that - how can they be in phase if they are reproducing different signals - but I think some people take "in phase" to simply mean wired correctly. Tim |
Behringer active crossover
A couple of things regarding crossovers...
1. Manufacturers and customers often confuse polarity and phase. Phase is frequency dependent; polarity can be changed with a switch or leads reversal. 2. The best way to set up your triamplified system with electronic crossover would be to beg or borrow two items: An electronic test setup, whether it be MLSSA, TEF, Smaart, et al. This will allow you to watch the adjustment of your parameters in near real time, visually see the true capabilities and limitations of the enclosure/loudspeaker system and adjust your crossover accordingly. Prior to testing, procure one of the Thiele Small loudspeaker enclosure design packages that include the speaker parameters of the components you own. This will quickly get you in "the right ballpark". Good luck. |
Behringer active crossover
wrote in message ups.com... A couple of things regarding crossovers... 1. Manufacturers and customers often confuse polarity and phase. Phase is frequency dependent; polarity can be changed with a switch or leads reversal. 2. The best way to set up your triamplified system with electronic crossover would be to beg or borrow two items: An electronic test setup, whether it be MLSSA, TEF, Smaart, et al. This will allow you to watch the adjustment of your parameters in near real time, visually see the true capabilities and limitations of the enclosure/loudspeaker system and adjust your crossover accordingly. Prior to testing, procure one of the Thiele Small loudspeaker enclosure design packages that include the speaker parameters of the components you own. This will quickly get you in "the right ballpark". Good luck. Very useful advice. Thanks. My experience so far with tri-amping is all good. I now have a system that is a lot closer to what I want. Its just that the lights dim when I switch it on! This is with using a car sub and some not particularly high-spec tweeters. It is strange to hear the effect of increasing, for example, the high treble. The whole band moves up rather than an increase in slope as you used to get with simple tone controls. Now I've got to do the difficult bit and decide on the sub. Peter Scott |
Behringer active crossover
In article , Tim Martin
wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote If we ignore all the above complications and assume two speakers, each radiating *in phase* at the same level then the result at a listening location equidistant from both is a *6dB* rise. Not 3dB. I thought that was only if they were reproducing the same signal. The context of the discussion from which the above quote is snipped was that the two speakers were being driven from the same source (signal) albiet with a crossover that may affect the amplitude/phase relationship. The "ignore all the above" indicated that the crossover, etc, didn't change the phase relationship so the two units were being driven with the same signal in time alignment. Slainte, Jim -- Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Audio Misc http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/AudioMisc/index.html Armstrong Audio http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/Audio/armstrong.html Barbirolli Soc. http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/JBSoc/JBSoc.html |
Behringer active crossover
wrote in message ups.com... A couple of things regarding crossovers... 1. Manufacturers and customers often confuse polarity and phase. Phase is frequency dependent; polarity can be changed with a switch or leads reversal. 2. The best way to set up your triamplified system with electronic crossover would be to beg or borrow two items: An electronic test setup, whether it be MLSSA, TEF, Smaart, et al. This will allow you to watch the adjustment of your parameters in near real time, visually see the true capabilities and limitations of the enclosure/loudspeaker system and adjust your crossover accordingly. Prior to testing, procure one of the Thiele Small loudspeaker enclosure design packages that include the speaker parameters of the components you own. This will quickly get you in "the right ballpark". Good luck. Please excuse if this is a repeat. I cannot see the message I posted but everyone else could. This has happened before. Very useful advice. Thanks. My experience so far with tri-amping is all good. I now have a system that is a lot closer to what I want. Its just that the lights dim when I switch it on! This is with using a car sub and some not particularly high-spec tweeters. It is strange to hear the effect of increasing, for example, the high treble. The whole band moves up rather than an increase in slope as you used to get with simple tone controls. Now I've got to do the difficult bit and decide on the sub. Peter Scott |
Behringer active crossover
In polarity with a DC signal with the speaker occupying the same space,
the 6 dB differential is absolutely correct. With a complex phase signal, which many commerically available loudspeakers being non-coherent at best and which differ slightly between even sequential serial numbers, the issue thus becomes significantly more complex. This can be demonstrated with two stacked identical loudspeakers fed identical, but with a relative polarity reversed, signal. This was one of Don Davis's favorite tricks in his Syn-Aud-Con training sessions. One of the easiest ways a non-technical person can evaluate a speaker for obvious phase anomalies is to playback a full bandwidth swept sinewave at a relatively low level. These are available on dozens of commercial test CDs. If you hear "birdies", you have a phase problem at that particular reproduction frequency. A birdie is immediately obvious, sounding something akin to a Looney Tunes cartoon sound effect. BEE-OOO-WOOP. To the best of my experience (I've tested many), only some of the planar electrostatic and plasma speakers have truly decent full bandwidth phase responses over the majority of their bandwidth while not exhibiting compensatory frequency anomalies. A few (a handful) dynamic speakers from truly capable designers are also on the market. This is where digital filtering (once it is fully understood) will eventually take over the commercial signal processing market- the theory being eventually we will be able to alter frequency without requisite phase anomalies as happens in the analog world. To listen to a high quality reproduction system with excellent phase response is a truly great experience. It does transport you to a different world, not unlike viewing a real painting masterpiece. A picture in the book can only bring back memories of the original at best. That being said, the major thrust in the commercial market today is not reproduction (including phase) accuracy- note how many commentators marvel at higher bandwidth iPod iterations while exclaiming the virtues of its near perfect performance. One wonders just how many Stax headphones are actually connected to iPods in this world. I'm sure we'll have to wait this trend out. Ten years ago 44.1 kHz sampling on a CD was not good enough and we eventually ended up with competing DVD Audio and SACD audio products. How an iPod sampling (generally sourced a 44.1 CD and then heavily compressed) at 128kbps or even 320k reaches perfection pushes the world of the illogic back to flogiston theory. Mind you the DVD Audio bit rate is 9.6 MEGAbits per second. One of these days I hope I'll read a review of an iPod's technical performance using high end test equipment. It would be great to see bandwidth, polarity, phase, THD+Noise, S/N ratio, etc. Yet I digress... |
Behringer active crossover
Arny Krueger wrote:
We seem to have mo-better alternatives in low-cost SPL meters in the states. ... Here's almost exactly what I use, UK sourced: http://www.cornwallelectronics.co.uk/? ... Thanks for the links, Arny. Just found a local supplier of the digital version of this one (the peak hold feature looks useful), so I'll be off out soon to get it. -- Wally www.artbywally.com/FiatPandaRally/index.htm www.wally.myby.co.uk |
Behringer active crossover
Peter Scott wrote:
CPC does some that have a bigger range and at a good price. http://cpc.farnell.com See reply to Arny - the Tandy/RadioShack ones seems to get a lot of good opinion for measuring SPL on a budget, so I'll be getting one of the 40 quid digital display jobbies. -- Wally www.artbywally.com/FiatPandaRally/index.htm www.wally.myby.co.uk |
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