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08-04-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,658
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 51
Post ID: 16787
Reply to: 16786
OK, Much Clearer Now...
fiogf49gjkf0d
Jorge, thank you for taking the time to share your experience and your approach to UBH set-up, etc.  I don't know about others, but this was very helpful to me to put your previous remarks into context.

Best regards,
Paul S
08-04-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,160
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 52
Post ID: 16788
Reply to: 16786
A good guide. A few things I would like to expend on.
fiogf49gjkf0d

The “best midrange comes from compression drivers”. I see somebody like Haralanov would be very much opposed to this comment. The irony is that I would be opposed as well to this comment.  I would say that the best midrange at over 107dB sensitively is the simplest to get from compression drivers. I did heard very good non compression driver but they were good 10-20 less sensitivity then good compression drivers, not to mention that non compression driver will have a lot of difficulty to work with a good upperbass horn, and this is not a laughing matter as a proper upperbass horn with a right compression driver is the winning tandem, not the MF compression driver itself.

 The whole business of having something “best” is a bit tricky and it has to be understood properly. The best is not an absolute criterion but rather the best balanced criteria. The best compression driver is like a woman. Women know own best and worse properties of appearance and they use different tools of dressing, make up, behavior and etc… to hide the less attractive element of own appearance  and to highline on the most reactive properties. Would we consider that a women that does it most successfully might be considered the “best woman”? I do not think so but the compression driver it appears to me works in the very same way. It looks like it is very easy to capitalize on the best what a compression driver doe the best and it looks like it is relatively easy to deal very effectively with problems of compression drivers. So, I would not call that the best midrange comes from compression drivers but I would say that as a ready to go package the compression drivers are more optimized to get the best MF as they are.

Another subject that I would like to point out that in upperbass horns there are very narrow margin what would be the best size of upperbass horn.  Your MF mush be fast opening horn, this is not arguable and if you are in MF with exponential horn then you are ether deaf of a Moron. Either Tratrix or La-horn are fine, or it might be any other fast opening profile.  If you go for 120Hz upperbass then you most likely would like to stay with fast opening, it looks better and it has some sonic advantages, the sonic advantages are arguable however for 120Hz horn.  Still, 120Hz horn is 36”, and then we have let say 12” of MF horn. A half of 12” is 6” and we do not want the upperbass and MF overlap. So, 36” of upperbass and half of MF horn make 42” of the MF driver height. Jorge said that MF driver has to be at hears level, which is about 42”. So, we just concluder a proof that that 115-120Hz is the maximum possible size for upperbass horn. Sure you might put your upperbass above your MF but then you need to paint your horns in red, green, yellow and blue stripes in order everyone see that you are a Moron. Now let to see what happened with the upperbass length.  If you have 35”-36” diameter then the length will be dictated by the diameter of your throat. If you go for 1.5” as WE and the imitator do then your horn will be an ugly snake that you will never time-align with MF driver. If you go for 6”-8” throat that Bruce so like to make for his mostly idiotic customers then your upperbass will act mostly as a direct radiator and will not have the necessary equalization. If you sit with a 3D modeling software and begin to slide the throat up and down and to preview the desirable upperbass length in order to have the sufficient horn EQ, the easy of time aliment and the proper esthetic appearance foe your acoustic system in your frame then you very fast discover that 34”-37” is the very optimum length that makes upperbass to have 4” throat. A simple calculation will inform you that with 4” throat Tratrix blowing into 35” mouth will yeald for you +6 dB gain at the horn lover cut off. Congratulation, you just reinvented the basic Macondo geometry! Another 10 years of experience on the subject and you will reinvent what I leaned – a design of proper horn installation must start from design of horn supporting frame, but this is whole another subject…

A few words about a subject that Jorge missed. The loading of the amp or amps that drive MF and upperbass is super important. If you use tubes then more loading of output stage gives you more gain, more power, more harmonics, better diaphragm damping. Letting the output tube to run more idle give you faster transient response, less distortion, shorter decays. It is not necessary to multi-amp your MF and upperbass if you would like to mitigate the individual loading between the channels, you can do it with a single amp as well. Still, loading is VERY powerful tool, in many cased more powerful then a change of the drivers.

About the upperbass horn, upperbass horns are not panacea in my view. There are other topologies that can deliver very good upperbass results. The infinite baffle or VERY large open baffles in my estimation do very well. The problem with large open baffles is that they do not accept any channels under bottom, nothing will work with them. There are other problems with large open baffles, like large vertical surfaces destroy imaging and many others problems.  The upperbass horns in contrary not only sound well but as they do not deal with acoustic shorting as the result they accommodate proper bass support.

Rgs,
Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-05-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
unicon


Posts 74
Joined on 10-14-2009

Post #: 53
Post ID: 16789
Reply to: 16766
Single driver and color
fiogf49gjkf0d
 haralanov wrote:
 Romy the Cat wrote:
One more thing. In my mind the injection that I use is more preferable solution then to use truly rich driver as you presumably use. The resosn is that using one good driver you have no control over it's color. The driver is what it is and you can't add or reduced colors. Using one driver you have no control over depth of colors, I do.

 I have control over thousand parameters of my main driver (and not only my main driver, but also my tweeters, my upperbass/lower midrange drivers and my 23” bass drivers!) Choosing the type of magnet system, the geometry of the magnetic circuit, the hysteresis properties of the magnetic steel, the type of the voice coil, the material of the VC former, the INDUCTANCE of the voice coil, the type of the glue for the different joints, the way the sound energy coming from the VC is transferred to the cone, the type of the cone, the geometrical properties of the cone, the type of suspension, the combination of different materials for that suspension (for more complex tone) and literally zillion other variables – I am able to manipulate the tone to any degree I want – I have unlimited freedom to do so.


 

Romy Besides that how I try to avoid any acoustic compression in drivers I'm using in my playback (upper bass , bass, mids , highs etc.)   and how I think we should only use them in outdoor alarm sound enforcement systems
 you are absolutely wrong about  "The resosn is that using one good driver you have no control over it's color. The driver is what it is and you can't add or reduced colors. Using one driver you have no control over depth of colors".
I recently have tried many mounting methods  and can say that for sure it changed many parameters such as colors and tones of drivers ...

unicon
08-05-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Jorge
Austin TX
Posts 141
Joined on 10-17-2010

Post #: 54
Post ID: 16790
Reply to: 16789
Meat in the bones
fiogf49gjkf0d
Sometimes it is not so much as adding color, but taking it away.  Most cheap cone drivers will exhibit a loose sound,  so if you want to get the cellos more clearly, you need to get some meat off the bones or they wil get lost in the mess.

Having a thin, detailed structure helps when adding weight and color in the sense that you can add just as much as needed.  It would be more difficult to get a clear sound out of a chubbby driver.

Another important point to make is:  Color must be added quirurgically,  the wood on the violin needs a little more red: Having multiple channels allows you to get a more detailed point of application of tone and color,  as oposed to painting the whole orchestra green!

I do not want this to become a Horns vs box speaker contest.  Lets just say if any topology of speakers can achieve the effects wanted and described,  it would be great to share some input.




PS:
Saying something is the Best shows a lack of taste and a little ignorance,  I rarely do,  somehow that one sliped among the excitement.
08-05-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,658
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 55
Post ID: 16791
Reply to: 16790
Color Range and One Trick Ponies
fiogf49gjkf0d

"Given" correct pitch, timbre, weight and scale, the crux seems to be balancing available color saturation, color range, articulation and "force".  Getting this "right" is what I have referred to as the "matrix", and when the "critical mass" is achieved, the results are literally startling.  I don't know why, but all by itself it has an uncanny effect on "image" and "soundstage", rendering the presentation as "real" (ok, "more real"...) in a way that I am very eager to explore.  Even in mono...  It is only fairly recently that I started listening to it this way, during trials of my new "stack" of tone-rich drivers.  I could not sustain it with the rough stack, but I believe I got enough information to press on.

Jorge, you are spot on about the "turgid" quality of "chubby" drivers, although a lot more than is generally supposed might be gotten from more "delicate" drivers, without cutting meat off the bones.  Of course we are not talking 6" FR...  While any signature sound might be a problem, the S2 as you all describe it is an example of a very "rough" driver that might be tweaked to "outperform" a typically-smooth driver.  Like I said before, today I would try to "use" the 808's "faults" to sonic advantage rather than trying to make it sound like a 375...  Likewise, all a driver's strengths might be used more wisely.

We probably all hate the One Trick Pony, and once a specific trait becomes obvious and then relentless as such, how long is it tolerable?

Best regards,
Paul S

08-05-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,160
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 56
Post ID: 16792
Reply to: 16789
I do not know how serious all of those claims
fiogf49gjkf0d
 unicon wrote:
I recently have tried many mounting methods  and can say that for sure it changed many parameters such as colors and tones of drivers ...
Possible, I personally have no experience with it and I commented only about I know. I heard numerous report about soaking cones with some obscure things, elimination of driver suspension and many other recipes. I have no down that it all work I one way or another but I purposely have no judgment how serious all of those claims.
 
The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-06-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,160
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 57
Post ID: 16793
Reply to: 16790
The way how I see it, perhaps mistakably.
fiogf49gjkf0d

 Jorge wrote:
Sometimes it is not so much as adding color, but taking it away.  Most cheap cone drivers will exhibit a loose sound,  so if you want to get the cellos more clearly, you need to get some meat off the bones or they wil get lost in the mess.

Having a thin, detailed structure helps when adding weight and color in the sense that you can add just as much as needed.  It would be more difficult to get a clear sound out of a chubbby driver.

Another important point to make is:  Color must be added quirurgically,  the wood on the violin needs a little more red: Having multiple channels allows you to get a more detailed point of application of tone and color,  as oposed to painting the whole orchestra green!

I do not want this to become a Horns vs box speaker contest.  Lets just say if any topology of speakers can achieve the effects wanted and described,  it would be great to share some input.

As I said, there is no doubt that desirable combination of color density, color contrast and color discrimination at different dynamic levels might be accomplished by a single direct radiator driver.  The compression drivers have no advantage in this department with exception that they might or might not do it at 10-20dB higher dynamic level.

However, we do not have an ability to correlate the actual Sound and we are driven only by claims that people make on-line. It would be nice to have some kind of tone/color pissing context where people could come to together and to compare noted about the actual results. Unfortunately this is not always possible or even imposable.   BTW, I did proposed an idea of Foundation Standarts for Exposed Evaluation:

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?PostID=16355

Someone might look into this.

So, we all understand that we do not deal with the actual results but with different people, including myself, running mouths on line. So the value of those claims is very questionable. However, as far as I am familiar with what people only say of claim my site is THE only one location where the subject of moderation of color density, temperance with color discrimination, the employment of color contrast at low dynamic levels, deliberate management the entire warmth of tone and many other factors are even mentioned and even designated as playback design objective. No one there talks about, at least I did not see, read or was exposed to it in any other ways. So, I do not see this tendency in other and since I know that to accomplish all those things is possible only if one clearly identify what she/he would like to accomplish I do not know how valid all those claims.

I do not claim that what people lie when they say about their ability to moderate anything they want by changing suspensions, materials or injection of some kind of tone-shaping ingredients into the direct radiator’s cellulose diaphragm pulp. This is very good direction to go and to this and many private parties and commercial companies do experiments with it. I do not use this approach and I do not know the rule and the result of the engagement. If somebody claim they use leather out suspension then I can concur with it as I heard the leather-suspended driver as I know the results. If someone claim the they use paper for cones with variable thickness and let the paper be eaten by female orangutan and then to be passed by orangutan digestive system as according to them the orangutan’s stomach acids are able uniquely impact the molecular structure of cone then I do accept it respectfully but if people never ever talk about their objective about Sound then I do not know if all of it has any Sonic merit.

This is what I stay with my position regarding the “achievements of others” in audio coloring.

Rgs, Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-06-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,658
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 58
Post ID: 16794
Reply to: 16793
Causes, Effects, and Degrees of Separation
fiogf49gjkf0d
Perhaps to bring some perspective: As Romy obviously suspects, the stock drivers I have been experimenting with are in the low-mid 90s, in terms of efficiency, although alterations include raising efficiency - somewhat.  And yes, this introduces its own set of problems.  As ever.  No Free Lunch.  As for the particular Lunches we do settle (and pay) for...

Around here, we often bandy the term "psycho-acoustic", and I think it is valid to understand the effects of sound as existing largely in the mind.  In fact, to read certain descriptions and correlations drawn between aural cause and effect, one could not be blamed for suspecting imagination at work.  While this is not "a bad thing", it can make practical understanding more complicated than the usual prima facie "exchange of ideas", aka, BS session.

There is no question that the various components of a given driver, and their realtionships, affect the sound from the driver.  So what?  The idea is not to recognize and exploit the mere fact but rather to codify and get control over this, for predictable, repeatable resuts.  Still, any "results" will NEVER be beyond one's abilty to understand and "further" exploit them for mining Music.  And, obviously, one's capacity as a miner factors large at GSC, where there are at least bases for "judging" results.

God bless everyone who is happy with any or every "aspect" of any or every part of his system.  If someone finds delight in the color rendered by compression drivers and horns, why try to take it away?  As for finding significant cause and effect relationships between drivers, their parts, and the sounds they render, I have taken the long road to gain some practical working knowledge of this, and Haralanov is certainly my senior in these matters, as I have easily determined, practically speaking.  I can say at the start (I have already said it...) that I am  not predisposed to make anything more complicated, mystical, or fraternal than need be.  However, this does not mean it is "simple".  If the "best" cone for my purposes happens to be part of a driver that is rare and expensive, I will not on acquiring it join The Order and fall to my knees to worship it or the "genius" who designed it.  Rather, it will be "developed" according to its aural merit in the context of the Music System.  Also, I do not see the value in trying to write up a shopping list as some kind of short cut for anyone who thinks there is or will be some sort of abbreviated version to follow.

Obviously, Romy has his doubts about the practical value of the home-brewed drivers he has seen.  And who can read without wondering about the practical significance of any number of "exotic", "natural" or any-type-of-formulaic-patent-medicinal curatives we see and hear about on the world wide web?  OTOH, one need not leave the safe confines of Home to find snake oil in situ.  Enthusiasm is not a crime; but taking it wrong can certainly result in "wasted" time.

On a lighter note, I have actually read some interesting - if relatively simplistic - commentary on Tone at guitar forums.  Too bad about their bases for the discussions, however, and I will close by saying it bodes well for anyone interested in the subject to be alert to context. 

Paul S
08-06-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,160
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 59
Post ID: 16796
Reply to: 16794
Yes, but….
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Paul S wrote:
On a lighter note, I have actually read some interesting - if relatively simplistic - commentary on Tone at guitar forums.  Too bad about their bases for the discussions, however, and I will close by saying it bodes well for anyone interested in the subject to be alert to context.

Yes, I am well familiar with that, the folks who build electronics for guitar processors and guitar amplifiers are quite evolved in the subject of obtaining specific tone and specific harmonics from the sound they get. Many so called high-end manufactures might only envy to the know-how that guitar amp builder possess. Unfortunately the direction that guitar builders go is good but the result that they looking to get and getting are very m8ch not applicable in high-end audio. The guitar builders look for septic distortion patterns and specific coloration that are not useful in hi-fi. Also, guitar erumpent is very single-minded sort of speaking and it does not exposed to such a divert duty and devers set of objective as we can see in High-End Audio.

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-06-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Jorge
Austin TX
Posts 141
Joined on 10-17-2010

Post #: 60
Post ID: 16797
Reply to: 16796
Wrong Analogy
fiogf49gjkf0d
I think we have been using the wrong analogy here, trying to compare sound to painting in the sense that it is not about adding things to sound as much as taking off.

I believe the right analogy would be sculpting:  In order to get a good sound,  one must take off material from a piece of stone in order to bring the instruments to life.  As much as we take off, as much as we dig between the the strings of the guitar the better it will be able to come out.

Most bad systems are just big bunch of lard putting out something that resembles music,  now trying to get detail and tone and harmonics out of that piece of lard would make us to dig inside that thing with a spoon and when you think you are getting somewere a big chuck of material just bends over on top of that and messes things further.

Carrara Marble is famous for its strength and maneuverability, you can go into detail inside the stone taking piece by piece off and making a perfect hand, a perfect torso, once the figure is out of the marble, as Michael Angelo used to say,  the marble admits more work to be done to it,  detailing of the sculpture starts,  diggin in more between the arm and the body,  making the fingers of the hand a little more skinny, making the bones of the knuckles to show. even a vein sliding through, I put in my mind right now Rodin´s sculpture The Kiss,  and how the man´s hand is barely touching the women´s chubby thigh.

Bass is a big lard monster that will cover the beatiful shaping of sound, most systems, even very good ones,  are like sculptures covered with excessive bass, and highs:  This is what  I mean when I mention the Seamless Extended Midrange.   The fundamental tones of the instruments are more clear with a better tonal pallette and, belive it or not, with more dynamic bass undertones,  when the volume of the bass channles are not flooding sound.

Tweeters are as dangerous as woofers,  but I imagine high frequency flooding as extra spikes coming out of the sculpture,  imagine this great female lovely belly protruding between the hip bones, and then a big spike of salt coming out next to the belly button, or an invasion of little cristals covering the face of our scultpture in some sort of solid acne you can sand off by just lowering the volume on your tweeters.  This wont make your sound more dull, it will make the shapes and roundnesses of the muscles and the fatty deposits to show more clearly, letting you know where it is attached to the bone. 

Sound wise this would mean that the instruments, whose fundamental frequencies are clearly in the midrange,  will come out of your speakers as midrange sounding with the natural overtones of bass and highs,  and not some big injection of tonal saturation.

Funny but I keep coming back to full range drivers,  I think they are a great school of listening;  say a Saba Green cone,  it plays wonderful clean midrange frequencies with just enough bass overtones to make up the instrument, and just enough highs to bring it out; leaving the  instrument unharmed by higher tones,  so most instruments are played properly.   Just dont ask real life dynamics and a full orchestra out of them.
08-07-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,658
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 61
Post ID: 16798
Reply to: 16797
Audio/Visuals/Angels/Pin Heads
fiogf49gjkf0d
Maybe it's also the very "visual" mind and related vocabulary trying to express audio ideas? While there are any number of verbal strategies for describing sound, most hinge on "visuals".

Another visual is the new-ish process whereby items (generally proto-types) are quasi-magically "grown" with electrical beams from a base "matrix".  I like this one!

As it happens, my wife is a sculptor.  Sure, there is a version of this that suggests the artist removes material until the piece is "found".  But this assumes there is a There there, to begin with.  There is also sculpting with clay, etc., where the process is "additive".  Is the "seed" in this case in the material or the artist?  I understand all of these visual analogies to dance near enough to the subject of audio to be useful, given a sympatico dialog, and this in turn might even play with more "abstract" notions of sculpture, as opposed to figurative and/or more "classical"notions.

Another interesting question would be, how many Sabas does it take to equal an orchestra?


Best regards,
Paul S
 
08-07-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,160
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 62
Post ID: 16799
Reply to: 16797
Rather wrong practice.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Jorge wrote:
I think we have been using the wrong analogy here…..
I think it is not Wrong Analogy but Wrong Practice. I kind of getting annoyed buy general practice to talk or to think about audio as it is some kind of abstractive substance. A person shall do things, get the results he intended and then USE the result. Audio exists not in the ceremony of searching results but in practice of using it. Somebody use compressions drivers, full-range, or whatever but the key is not in what they used but how what they use helps them in whatever they are looking in playback.   All those conversation about audio methods without direct relation to listenable objectives and direct correlation of results with interpretive musical characteristic of playback I found are just shaking air with mouth.  I am not against taking but I feel that in most of the cases besides interests of audio people there is nothing that value.   I have passed the period of my live when I was fascinated in Audio by plate currents, VTA setting or specifics of non-horizontal time aliment of drivers.  I still play all those games but frankly I care less about them.

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-07-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,658
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 63
Post ID: 16803
Reply to: 16799
The 3-legged (running) Dog of GSC Hi-Fi
fiogf49gjkf0d
1) Dynamic appreciation and understanding of Music.

2) Dynamic appreciation and understanding of Sound(s) as this relates to Music.

3) Dynamic appreciation and understanding of electro-mechanical effects of hi-fi as they bear on 1 & 2.

So, what happened to the Stool?  Good question!  If to merely sit there speculating, then scroll down the OED definitions to see what the stool is worth...

Paul S
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  »  New  About Boiling Micro Response...  Complex and incredibly interesting?...  Playback Listening  Forum     2  33955  10-05-2010
  »  New  About the Audio Neutrality...  Taking neutral when/where one can get it...  Playback Listening  Forum     12  111881  03-31-2007
  »  New  How to evaluate playback... or the Six-Leveled-Listenin..  Introduction to Level #2 - the Dynamic Level...  Playback Listening  Forum     3  76379  06-12-2004
  »  New  Macondo's Axioms: Horn-loaded acoustic systems..  A link to another thread....  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     120  681404  07-29-2007
  »  New  About speakers Imbedded Macro-Positioning...  Big room AEZ...  Playback Listening  Forum     15  187941  05-16-2007
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