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  »  New  The “Primary Frequencies”...  Melody range and the other octaves...  Audio For Dummies ™  Forum     5  78991  09-08-2005
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  »  New  Macondo's Axioms: Horn-loaded acoustic systems..  A link to another thread....  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     120  680379  07-29-2007
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  »  New  Adding one more non-spherical to Macondo...  Horn suggestions for 300Hz-1000Hz channel...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     23  249239  12-15-2010
08-12-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 51
Post ID: 5009
Reply to: 4999
Slowly rolling back…

I am not quite sure what is going on but wherever is going on is wrong. I was listening this morning Shostakovich’s second cello concerto by Berlin and Rostropovich and I detected that something was not right. It was too direct and “too stereo”, if I might say so. It has no of that smoky sound that is almost mandatory for any cello concerto. The Rostropovich was too prominent, not imaging- or volume-wise but the contrast-wise, it did not make sense…

I decided to close up the back chambers in my Fundamental Channels. It was interesting result. The hi-fi-quality of the recording move down, the articulation of the cello become slightly murkier and the Berlin Philharmonic’s Sound got more ambient and creamier but at the same time the entire play got more sensible, more united.  The lower midrange region become not “too sexy” but instead more dissolves in the rest of the music.

Go figure… I deseeded to close up the S2 back chamber for now and to put any further experiments on hold…

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
08-12-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 52
Post ID: 5011
Reply to: 5009
Back to Bermuda...

Romy,

Just to be sure, I ran all the tests again today, but this time at various volume levels.

I got exactly the same results as yesterday.

To answer your question (sorry it took me this long) : Yes I do use metal suspension on all 4 S2s. I will eventually try the plastic suspended diaphragms.

"...Vitavox did in 180Hz, 220Hz, 300Hz and 330Hz horns, all exponential. We know how S2 behaves in 330Hz – it was made for S2 driver..."

Once I am done with more of this project, I will make a 330Hz Tractrix to try in place of the upper mid 400Hz.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
08-12-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 53
Post ID: 5012
Reply to: 5011
Who cares what Vitavox did?!

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
Once I am done with more of this project, I will make a 330Hz Tractrix to try in place of the upper mid 400Hz.

Hm, I wonder what would be the purpose to make 330Hz horn for you if you have 400Hz and a dedicated lower MF channel? The only reason to do it would be the fact that you experience specific problems with lower knee of your MF channel, do you?  If you are persuaded by the fact the Vitavox did 330Hz horn to use with S2 then be advised that the same Vitavox systems that uses S2 sometimes were equipped with 220Hz “harrow” horns.

Still, I think it absolutely unnecessary for YOU to look at what Vitavox did. All their design with S2 driver were two ways systems and you are, dividing the S2 ranghe to HF and LF, are in way more advanced situation.

I think the 400Hz was a good chose. Let see what changed will be if you go for 330Hz instead of 400Hz? You will be able to driver your MF little harder at it’s bottom - do you need it if you have own Lower MF channel? You also will loose very slightly top end of your MF driver and will have more narrow MF radiation patter. Also, you will have ~60mm larger horn that will make the entire height of your frame’s horns taller. Sure, nothing wrong to make another horn and to experiment if it is easy for you but I would persuade you to use only your tangible sonic motivations to navigate yourself instead juts blindly looking at what Vitavox did.

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
08-12-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 54
Post ID: 5013
Reply to: 5012
297.875Hz ; The magic number?
330 or 300 or 297.875Hz... Migh all be just as interesting... Or more likely a complete waste of time.

It does not matter what Vitavox did.

My motivations : There is only one, and it is not related to the lower knee of my Upper MF horn/driver, so you might say I am shooting in the dark like a wounded in the ass audiophile. I understand the drawbacks involved with the larger horn; I would do the experiment only in the name of observing the effect it may have on the "Beneficial Resonance" zone of the S2.

So why 330Hz... Because, based on results of the 400Hz horn, I would not want to go much lower.

If/when I do the experiment, I would probably also make a +or- 500Hz horn with the same aim in mind (it does not take me long to make a small horns if I leave the exterior unfinished).

I am also experimenting with approaches like the one illustrated in the attached image (can't comment on results yet... I have to re-conduct the experiment... I screwed it up).

jd*



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
08-12-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 55
Post ID: 5014
Reply to: 5013
The Vitavox S2 back chamber stuffing.

I did a lot of those experiments a few years back, stuffing the back chamber of S2 driver with all imaginable things. During that time I did not use a dedicated lower MF channels and was concerned only about the S2 top end. I did not detect any difference in sound, as lease in the area that I was interesting. I might presume that for lover MF the back chamber stuffing might be way more interesting direction to explore.

Still the results of the back chamber stuffing most likely will be correlateable only when the drivers are loaded in identical horn (the same throat reactance). What the chamber stuffing does? Depending of the type of the stuffing it might virtually increase of decrease the size of the chamber, driving primary resonance up or down. I presume that when S2 was made they made (if they ever did it intentionally) the chamber to damp the 330Hz exponential. The volume of air in 330Hz exponential probably is the same as 220Hz tratrix, I do not know the exact numbers, however…

…however, the air’s volume rational might be is very erroneous way to view the things as Vitivox used bogus profile horns, primary stolen from Altec and Klipsch. Therefore, in reality I would not be surprised if they never even thought seriously what they did and juts went for the profile/size of the horn that just would fit the size of their cabinets.

I think all that S2 loading sage should be completely reviewed by us. Nowdays, using S2 driver in our home installations and with contemporary playback demands we are getting from those drivers so much more then they initially intended of imagined that any “default” Vitavox intentions should not be under any attention.

With 6-chenals installation using the S2 drivers we are not in Kansans anymore…

Rgs, 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
09-27-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 56
Post ID: 5442
Reply to: 5013
Crossing in the middle
For anyone playing with S2s and horns, particularly if contemplating splitting the mid-range between two drivers/horns...

Jessie Dazzle wrote (in the context of the compressed recordings thread) :

"...Another thing that seems to make compressed recordings more tolerable...The other day I tried letting the 180Hz lower-mid horn do more, and the 400Hz upper-mid horn do less, by moving the crossover points up. I need to take time and listen to it more with a clear head. I don't yet know if it is better or worse when playing well-recorded music. I also have not measured the output. My motivation in trying this was to let the the  upper-mid S2 concentrate only on the upper half of the mid-range..."

I've been listening for about one week now with the filters set so the hand off from lower-mid to upper-mid happens higher up (upper-mid S2 is high-passed at 4800Hz instead of 3200Hz), meaning the small 400Hz horn is doing only the upper "half" of the mid range. I left the 180Hz horn as it was (790-3200Hz).

I have been playing everything from content-loaded classical to "modern beat-driven music", to compressed pop, to some damn intense electronic***(ok ok, see note at end)...

I have not measured the output (too many other things to finish). I don't know exactly where the acoustic transition is happening, or if I am leaving a range uncovered. The point is, that the difference is such that I don't need to measure anything to be sure that this is better than when I had the upper-mid horn high-passed (electronically) lower down, at 3200Hz. I was most likely getting some overlap in the crossover region between the two horns (I don't attenuate the 180Hz "Fundamentals Channel", or any other channels).

So the 180Hz horn is currently handling two octaves (electronically), the 400Hz horn is also now handling only two octaves (electronically)... I like what I hear well enough to not ask these horns to do more than this. If measurement reveals an uncovered zone between the two, I would rather add another horn than to ask more of the existing horns...

jd*

***The off-thread "Note at end" :

While I listen mostly to music made by "acoustic instruments" and vocals (lots of "Lieder" recently... I sort of inherited a library), I will, at the risk of completely discrediting myself, state the following:

There IS electronic music that has nothing to do with the thumping mindless "Techno" club, cut & paste poorly recorded garbage we most often associate with the genre... it can be very well done... I would even go so far as to say that it is the genre that most closely approaches classical... and as I am discovering, it can be extremely well portrayed by an as yet incomplete full-range horn system with good lower-bass capacity.

Of course an oboe played by a synthesizer is not the same as the real thing (these guys don't have the means to employ 37 musicians), but listening to this music, one is less looking for that sort of fidelity... There is quality in the sound, but it is more about sheer creativity and the overall message... seen as an abstract representation, in the best cases, the issue of not having the real instrument is just not an issue. Yes it may have started off wanting to be an oboe, but it is now just sound, and of interest here is how that sound is employed. This sort of system will bring out the care that was put into the creation of such music, in a way that has little to do with what we look for (technically) in traditional acoustic performances.


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
09-28-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 57
Post ID: 5443
Reply to: 5442
I migh be the phase "clicking"....

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
I've been listening for about one week now with the filters set so the hand off from lower-mid to upper-mid happens higher up (upper-mid S2 is high-passed at 4800Hz instead of 3200Hz), meaning the small 400Hz horn is doing only the upper "half" of the mid range. I left the 180Hz horn as it was (790-3200Hz)….

I have not measured the output (too many other things to finish). I don't know exactly where the acoustic transition is happening, or if I am leaving a range uncovered. The point is, that the difference is such that I don't need to measure anything to be sure that this is better than when I had the upper-mid horn high-passed (electronically) lower down, at 3200Hz. I was most likely getting some overlap in the crossover region between the two horns (I don't attenuate the 180Hz "Fundamentals Channel", or any other channels).

So the 180Hz horn is currently handling two octaves (electronically), the 400Hz horn is also now handling only two octaves (electronically)... I like what I hear well enough to not ask these horns to do more than this. If measurement reveals an uncovered zone between the two, I would rather add another horn than to ask more of the existing horns...


The difference between 3200Hz and 4800Hz is practically negligible and I presume that if you do feel a huge difference then it is not because you introduced a 1600Hz gap between the channels. It is most likely that you changing the yours crossover to 4800Hz introduced a phase shift that accidentally “clicked” with the neighboring channels (I doubt that at this point, after changing the crossover, you moved and time re-align the drivers).  You might look at the differences in imaging since you changed the crossover. If you got some precision in imaging then it was phase not amplitude. The amplitude-wise I would not worry at this point too much. All those numbers of electrical crossovers are absolutely not important. What important is the response you get at your listening position – it will be way out there anyhow… You will get RTA in the end and will figure out… BTW, do not forget the doing what you did moved the center radiation point of your installation slightly upper.

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
09-28-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 58
Post ID: 5445
Reply to: 5443
Further observations

Romy wrote :

"...It is most likely that you changing the yours crossover to 4800Hz introduced a phase shift that accidentally “clicked” with the neighboring channels...You might look at the differences in imaging since you changed the crossover..."

Hmm, interesting... The horns are not yet properly located (frames under construction)... in fact they are only sort of close, and at this stage, the L and R channels are not really symmetrical, so I tend to not focus on imaging; even so, I have not noted any differences in imaging with the new arrangement.

Here are some specific observations made with the 400Hz horn high-passed higher up (at 4800, versus 3200Hz):

1) I now use a higher volume setting on the preamp

2) "Cringe factor" has gone down... This simply means that I don't find myself reaching for the volume knob to turn down violin, horn, and upper range vocals passages which are less than absolutely perfectly recorded

3) Due to the higher volume setting, for what seems like the same mid-range output, there is now more output from the bass drivers

4) Overall the sound is now less thin and I would say "warmer"

As you have mentioned in the past, and as I have confirmed with RTA, the 400Hz horn, when high-passed at 3200Hz, is good acoustically down to about 1kHz. I now need to measure the output from the 180Hz horn, but in its current band-passed configuration (790-3200Hz), it will certainly produce sound well above 1KHz, the point where the 400Hz horn was coming on. I was for sure getting ouput from both horns in the 1-3k range, and it is possible that the 180Hz horn alone produces better results in this range (say 1KHz-2KHz) than if accompanied by the 400Hz horn.

As you pointed out, moving the high-pass point up from 3200 to 4800 is only a 1600Hz difference, but what if we look at it in terms of octaves we are asking the S2 to reproduce:

High-passing at 3200 means the S2 in the 400Hz horn will be asked to handle a full two octaves (electronically) :
Octave 1 : 3200 + 3200 = 6400, and Octave 2: 6400 + 6400 = 12800 (where a good S2 will naturally roll off)

High-passing at 4800 means the S2 in the 400Hz horn will be asked to handle only one octave (electronically) :
4800 + 4800 = 9600, plus a bit more above that, until natural roll off of the S2

I'm not sure that means much... I will try to take some measurements soon.

jd*



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
09-28-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 59
Post ID: 5446
Reply to: 5445
"I will try to take some measurements soon"...

Very interesting.  I appreciate that you have exposed more of your listening sensations  - that give more objective information, letting to propose more accurately what might took place. In regard to what you say it might not be the “phase clicking” but rather a mild decompression of the upper range S2.

The S2 crossed at 3200Hz at 6dB and pushing in a 400Hz horn 1000hz of air does reaches at it’s bottom the region where a very slight touch of the “Horn Boom” takes place. It is a mild form of honk, very modest and very much not detectable when the channel is supplemented with sub 1000Hz channel.  It is possible that moving the crossover point from 3200Hz to 4800Hz you further up removed the S2 from the Horn Boom region.  (The Horn Boom is always accompany with compression)

I did experimented with it and not detect that moving up the crossover point was a benefit. However, when I did those experiments (2001-2002) I did not use yet use a Fundamental Channel. So, during that time I was merging the S2 driver with my upperbass horn’ upper knee, which had too heavy cone to care 2000Hz. The lower friqency S2 driver should be way more interesting contestant….

Presumably you discovered an effect that worth to imitate or at least to try. Do you have the vertical image shift slightly up when you change your crossover point higher? Anyhow, let see what will be your further finding or perhaps the final findings. However, there are few things that would strongly encourage you to check before make up your mind, all of them are related to the S2 driver in 400Hz horn

1) Make sure that your cone is properly center in a gap. It is very important as misaligned cone will do compression at bottom end

2) Make sure that the driver’s center are absolutely in the center of the horn and absolutely parallel to the horn’s axis.  That is also very important with MF driver. If the driver does not sit in a perfect optical center of the horn then it will have very sever anomalies, particularly when the horn is towed in or out. With the spherical, low throat horns, as we have, it is very simple to misalign the center of the driver for a few fractions of mm.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
09-28-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 60
Post ID: 5448
Reply to: 5443
Correction & Vertical shift
Let me start with a correctoin :

Jessie Dazzle wrote (post dated 09-28-2007):


"...So the 180Hz horn is currently handling two octaves (electronically), the 400Hz horn is also now handling only two octaves (electronically)..."

This should read as follows :

"...So the 180Hz horn is currently handling two octaves (electronically), the 400Hz horn is now handling only one octave (electronically)..."

Romy wrote :

"...Do you have the vertical image shift slightly up when you change your crossover point higher?..."

I need to listen more specifically for it, but I don't recall detecting a shift... This could be because the upper bass driver is now playing at a louder level than before, thus "pulling" the center back down.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
09-28-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 61
Post ID: 5451
Reply to: 5448
Three mid channels crossovering - playing in the middle.

Jessie, in the configurations of the horns and derivers that you are building your mid channels do not exposed too much to stresses. It is not that you have a situation when 1/4 octave more and less will send your channels into suffocation - your horns/drivers operate within a relatively middle and secure ground. You might move them up and down as much as you wish (still within the boundaries of the horns rates), it is all educational but you need to also measurers them to make sure that you still have overall flat response.

I do not see your today finding as something that you will accept as final for yourself. If you decide to go 5-chennal with active amplification with your horns then the character of the MF sound will change.  It will not be “different” but it will be altered and you might review your positions how the best to mix those 3 channels. I am listening now left channel (because the first violins are there) with new 6-channels Milq and the  fully “active” Macondo and I might say that “active” Macondo has own, more advanced, Sound compare to the right channel, still driven by 3-channels Milq.

I somehow feel not comfortable that what I went to line-level crossover I somehow decided to replicate the crossovering patters that I have with speaker-level crossover. Well, I went to 6dB/octave on the Fundamentals’ Channel high-pass but the rest was the same…. It might be worth to experiment and perhaps to altar the crossover points again, but I wish I would have time and desire to do all over it again.

Consequently, what I am trying to say – if you defiantly go for DSETs to each channel then hold your experiments to the times when you will be able to conduct the experiments at line level. Then you will borrow or lease an active multi-channel crossover (digital of analog) for a weekend and will easy mimic all imaginary configurations – very educational  (I did it in a past). Do not forget that in active configuration you have control over harmonics of EACH channel and it will be a big dissimilarity. I very much presume that your findings now and then might be different…

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
01-13-2008 Post mapped to one branch of Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 62
Post ID: 6351
Reply to: 2757
The 6-ch Milq: Fundamentals vs. Injection Channels.
Playing recently with setting up the new 6-ch Milq I again got an interesting feeling about my Fundamentals Channel. The in Injection Channel partially overrides some benefit of the Fundamentals Channel and I have a partial feeling that it would be possible to make the Injection Channel to substitute the Fundamentals Channel. However, since the new Super Milq has ability of very precise and with very high quality to dial-in one and another channels it is very interesting to observe the different between Fundamentals Channel and Injection Channel.

The Injection set acridness of tonal colors; it is like vinegar that added to food. The Fundamentals Channel sets the density of the food itself. It is like Fundamentals Channel distinct meet from fish but the Injection Channel set a distinction between Caspian Osetr and Atlantic Herring. The Injection Channel set the “saturation of quality or tone” vs. the Fundamentals Channel more like set the amount of second harmonics and the tone weight. That are different and excessive too much application of each of them is not desirable and it is highly unlikely that it would be possible to fit in one channel the duty of the both Channels. it might be possible if I custom built an enclosure for Fundamentals Channel, very precisely circulating the output at upperbass and lover midrange for a given room and using a driver in there with a predicable among of injection “acridness”. Unfortunately I have no such skills, so to me the use of independent Channel with ability to reset operational parameters for each channels sounds as a very reasonable solution.

This post is referring to two threads in my site:

6 Channel Version of Super Melquiades

 and

How to USE “Resonating Oops” in loudspeakers

Below in the picture is very cool thing. Right under the 50mV meter there is an actually adjusts the output of Fundamentals Channel.

Surely I do not adjust the output of Fundamentals Channel frequently. In the 3-ch Milq I did it with resistors, setting the balance between MF and Fundamental Channel. Now it is a pure Fundamentals Channel adjustment. It feels different and I believe anybody really, for sake of education, needs to listen a playback with an ability of moderate acoustic output of "second harmonics" at the given frequencies. The volume of the Fundamental Channel should be set precisely for a given room and then the adjustment is not really necessary. Still, without this adjustment a playback from my point of view is losing a very powerful expressive tool.

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
06-10-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 63
Post ID: 7560
Reply to: 2452
How JBL is trying to do my “fundamentals channel”.
Sure, it is fully colored in JBL self-glorifying propaganda and their drivers from the last 20 years do not sound good but it is interesting to read that their objectives are remarkably similar to what I was trying to accomplish by my “Fundamentals Channel”.

http://www.romythecat.com/pdf/JBL_and_FundamentalsChannel.pdf

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
06-20-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
NBC
California
Posts 22
Joined on 08-10-2006

Post #: 64
Post ID: 7620
Reply to: 2741
250Hz tractrix upper range..?
Hi Romy,

I do not know how much experimenting you have done running a compression driver with no LP filter through your 250Hz tractrix.

However, in consideration of a given driver employed, irrespective of adjacent channels and by your various criteria for 'good sound', what do you feel is the upper usable frequency limit for operating your 250Hz tractrix before any negative effects of the horn itself become evident and begin unacceptably compromising the sound, versus moving to a smaller horn to cover the given range?

Regards,
Neil
06-21-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 65
Post ID: 7627
Reply to: 7620
This is a universal crossover rule


 NBC wrote:
… what do you feel is the upper usable frequency limit for operating your 250Hz tractrix before any negative effects of the horn itself become evident and begin unacceptably compromising the sound…

There is no other rules beside running a channel “A” all the way up and to see where the channel “B” begins to sound at its bottom knee “more interesting” then the channel “A” at its top knee. I have writhe about it many times.

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
06-22-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
NBC
California
Posts 22
Joined on 08-10-2006

Post #: 66
Post ID: 7647
Reply to: 7627
Specifically...
Hi Romy,

I understand the need to determine if the upper knee of channel A sounds better, or the lower knee of channel B sounds better, to cover a given range.

However, I'm contemplating having a 1.4" 250Hz Edgarhorn built and am curious if you determined where upper frequency negative horn effects begin occurring on your horn with e.g., your S2.

Regards,
Neil
10-28-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 67
Post ID: 8647
Reply to: 2433
The Fundamental Chanel gets a new driver.
fiogf49gjkf0d

As I wrote before I picked some Vitavox S3 driver.

http://www.GoodSoundClub.com/TreeItem.aspx?PostID=8619

and I was expediting with them recently to use in Fundamental Chanel. My idea was that S3 might care LF knee better then S2. In past I had S3 and I discard in rivalry with S2 as S2 was much more interning in HF region. The ceramic driver of S3 needs different type or amplification that I do not use. However, at that time I did not use Fundamental Chanel.

There are some advantages in S3 design that feel might be beneficial for sub 1K use of S3 drivers. The S3 had more accurately made output channel. I think it shell more benefit FH but who knows… Also, and this is a very big for me the S3 has the diaphragm plate decupled from the back plate. This decupling is very bad thing in S2.

Vitavox_S3.jpg

So, I mounted the S3 into the Fundamental Chanel and spent some time to listening this channel. I have to say that I like it but not what I expected. What I expected the S3 does very well – it runs at 600Hz with first order with no “issue” in the bottom region (250Hz Tratrix horn). The next step will be lowering the crossover point to 500-550Hz (that are ultimate objectives) but I need to open the Melquiades amps to do it. What however very much surprised me is the dynamic confidence with witch S3 cares the duty at 600Hz - very imprecise. The S2 was if not dying but really at the very last octave of it’s potency. If I run the Fundamental with S2 at 0dB in relation to MF then I felt it. Since I run the Fundamentals at minus ~ 9dB then the S2 was doing fine. The S3 does have more dynamic balls and it looks like at 600Hz it is still very much not “there”. It would be interning to drop crossover point with S3 at try it in 180Hz-210Hz horn.

I do not have a final decision if I go there. I defiantly will not go for 180Hz-210Hz horn. If I use the S3 then now much I will be able to drop in crossover until my 250Hz hors will feel it. The S3 is shorter then S2, so I would need to re-alight Fundamental Chanel. Still it look like S3 has more power handling at the same frequency, or perhaps it the original “high-pressure” clear diaphragms that my drivers came with. In any cases, the result so far stimulating to stick with S3 for LF region.

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
10-29-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 68
Post ID: 8651
Reply to: 8647
S2 : How low can you go ?
fiogf49gjkf0d

Romy wrote :

"...What I expected the S3 does very well – it runs at 600Hz with first order with no “issue” in the bottom region (250Hz Tratrix horn). The next step will be lowering the crossover point to 500-550Hz (that are ultimate objectives)... What however very much surprised me is the dynamic confidence with witch S3 cares the duty at 600Hz - very imprecise. The S2 was if not dying but really at the very last octave of it’s potency. If I run the Fundamental with S2 at 0dB in relation to MF then I felt it. Since I run the Fundamentals at minus ~ 9dB then the S2 was doing fine. The S3 does have more dynamic balls and it looks like at 600Hz it is still very much not “there”. It would be interning to drop crossover point with S3 at try it in 180Hz-210Hz horn...."

There should be no danger in running the S3s down to 500Hz; I am currently running a pair of S2s (same diaphragm as S3) down to 450Hz, 1st order, no problem.

The system is in a room that measures around 80m² with a 3m-high ceiling; in this size room, playing the system loud deos not distress the driver when filtered as described, and there is no evidence of honk at the lower end (the fundamentals channel in my case consists of an S2 into a 180 Hz horn). I should add that this channel is connected to the 8 Ohm taps, while all other channels are all connected to the 16 Ohm taps; the fundamentals channel is hence somewhat attenuated, but not a lot (the 180Hz horn is naturally louder).

Evolution of my own fundamentals channel :

I will now confess, after living with it both ways, to having gone some of the way back toward "misusing" my fundamentals channel.

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/GetPost.aspx?PostID=7760
That is to say, I am for the moment, allowing it to produce a full two octaves, as do all other channels of this system. The pair of drivers is now electronically filtered to work between 450 and 2000 Hz, 1st order (a 18µF cap followed by a 1.5mH coil).

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
10-29-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 69
Post ID: 8652
Reply to: 8651
The low-path knee of Fundamentals Channel.
fiogf49gjkf0d

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
There should be no danger in running the S3s down to 500Hz; I am currently running a pair of S2s (same diaphragm as S3) down to 450Hz, 1st order, no problem.

The system is in a room that measures around 80m² with a 3m-high ceiling; in this size room, playing the system loud deos not distress the driver when filtered as described, and there is no evidence of honk at the lower end (the fundamentals channel in my case consists of an S2 into a 180 Hz horn). I should add that this channel is connected to the 8 Ohm taps, while all other channels are all connected to the 16 Ohm taps; the fundamentals channel is hence somewhat attenuated, but not a lot (the 180Hz horn is naturally louder).

OK, if it so then my 550-600Hz limitation is not the limitation of S2 driver but my 250Hz horn. This BTW expanse what we have such a differences in assessment of leaking he the S2’s back chamber. (It was somewhere in past). In my case it let it the driver to go 50Hz harder (with some other issues arriving), in your case it was not good as you have a larger hors and there was so “room” for the driver to go down naturally. As I told before: the decision to go for 180Hz was very good on your part and now you are benefited. What is interning is that even in context of my 250Hz horn I do pick some benefits of S3: like higher dynamics at lower region. What would be VERY interning is to run S2 and S3 in 150Hz horn and to see if it possible to load them down to 350-400Hz. I have seen as S2 go apart at 450Hz in open air as the diaphragm-pressing plate is not good in S2. With S2 the diaphragm-pressing plate looks much better and it decoupled from the back of the driver – so I think the S3 will go lover, with no mechanical stress.

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
That is to say, I am for the moment, allowing it to produce a full two octaves, as do all other channels of this system. The pair of drivers is now electronically filtered to work between 450 and 2000 Hz, 1st order (a 18µF cap followed by a 1.5mH coil).

Well, it is very legitimate was to do the things. I see a few moments with increase of the low-path up to 2kHz I will outline below.

1)    The Fundamentals Channel at 2kHz with first order pass too much directional HF. Since the 180Hz  is relatively large (twice larger then 250Hz for instance) then the Fundamentals Channel axis will be higher and consequentially the mid lime of the system will be risen at 2kHz much more then at 1kHz. I personally would recommend of lower upper knee crossover point if you drop the lower knee crossover point, but it is only in the case if the minimum integration distance is important. With 80m² room I doubt that it is critical for you.

2)    If the upper knee of your Fundamentals Channel is at 2kHz hen you might not use 450Hz for MF Channel but go for 700-800Hz. This would add some HF extension to your MF channel and will make them MF less beamy.

3)    The biggest this that I see is the flatness of Vitavox drivers over the 1250Hz. Running the driver flat you will have let say  109dB at 500hz and 2kHz but you will have 113dB at 1250Hz. How do you deal with it? Using impedance compensators? Any other means?

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
10-29-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 70
Post ID: 8654
Reply to: 8647
Yep, I went for it. It is S3 now.
fiogf49gjkf0d

Vitavox_S3.jpg


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
10-30-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 71
Post ID: 8657
Reply to: 8647
Correction upon further inspection of the Black Hole
fiogf49gjkf0d

 Romy the Cat wrote:
There are some advantages in S3 design that feel might be beneficial for sub 1K use of S3 drivers. The S3 had more accurately made output channel. I think it shell more benefit FH but who knows… Also, and this is a very big for me the S3 has the diaphragm plate decupled from the back plate. This decupling is very bad thing in S2.

Among two new Vitavox S3 drivers that I got one was excellent but another was something that I call Black Hole driver. A “Black Hole” driver is a situation when your driver has a fully charged magnet, not open voice coil, not fractured diaphragm but do not produce any sound. So, my second S3 was Black Hole that sucked voltage but returned nothing. That forced me to fix the driver and upon dissecting it I realized that I was wrong presuming that in S3 the diaphragm pressing plate is decupled from the sources of external force – they are not. This is a big foolishness on Vitavox’s side, well it is what it is…. Still, I run S3 on my LF swapper and it goes quite lover then S2 before it become buzzing - a good sign generaly....

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
10-30-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 72
Post ID: 8658
Reply to: 8652
Fundamental evolution
fiogf49gjkf0d

Romy wrote :

"...This BTW expanse what we have such a differences in assessment of leaking he the S2’s back chamber. (It was somewhere in past)..."

I would just the same like to confirm my findings one more time in the new room; I will run the test again once I have the system back on the long wall with mid-bass horns in place (had to move it out of the way to make space for bass horn fabrication)

"...As I told before: the decision to go for 180Hz was very good on your part and now you are benefited...."

And as I mentioned before, you can credit yourself with that "right decision" (I made this decision based on Romy's experiences and confessions while adding and integrating the 250 Hz horn to his system)

"...What would be VERY interning is to run S2 and S3 in 150Hz horn and to see if it possible to load them down to 350-400Hz..."

Y E S ! This I would love to try.
Is the S3 as sensitive as the S2?

I keep telling myself that I am almost done making horns, but I keep having ideas to try additional horns (more on that when I finally decide to do it).

"...I have seen an S2 go apart at 450Hz in open air as the diaphragm-pressing plate is not good in S2. With S3 the diaphragm-pressing plate looks much better and it decoupled from the back of the driver – so I think the S3 will go lover, with no mechanical stress..."

Hm... It would probably become clearer to me if I had an S3 to compare with the S2. The diaphragm clamping plate of the S2 is very stout, but yes it is mechanically coupled to the heavy body of the driver (bolted right into it actually) as well as the rear cover.


"...1)    The Fundamentals Channel at 2kHz with first order pass too much directional HF. Since the 180Hz  is relatively large (twice larger then 250Hz for instance) then the Fundamentals Channel axis will be higher and consequentially the mid lime of the system will be risen at 2kHz much more then at 1kHz. I personally would recommend of lower upper knee crossover point if you drop the lower knee crossover point, but it is only in the case if the minimum integration distance is important. With 80m² room I doubt that it is critical for you..."

With the mid-bass horn construction taking so much space, I am forced to sit closer than normal; like about 8 ft... Surprisingly image height has not been as much an issue as I would have thought. But yes, in this configuration the system is more prone to presenting a spacious image. Image height was definitely an issue when I was really "misusing" the fundamentals channel, and running it up a lot higher in the frequency range. The final (in this room) set up will allow something like a max of 16 ft between the listener's head and the mouth of the upper-bass horns.

"...2)    If the upper knee of your Fundamentals Channel is at 2kHz then you might not use 450Hz for MF Channel but go for 700-800Hz. This would add some HF extension to your MF channel and will make them MF less beamy..."

If I understand correctly : With an upper knee of 2 KHz, you are suggesting that I try narrowing the band pass by moving the lower knee up to around 750 Hz (?) Hmmm... Yes I can try it, but it seems more logical to keep the 450 Hz lower knee (I like the body it adds) and to drop the upper knee a bit as you suggest above. As for beaming, I know how unlikely it seems, but I don't have beaming issues.

"...3)    The biggest this that I see is the flatness of Vitavox drivers over the 1250Hz. Running the driver flat you will have let say  109dB at 500hz and 2kHz but you will have 113dB at 1250Hz. How do you deal with it? Using impedance compensators? Any other means?..."

I run this channel flat. The only difference being that its connected to the 8 Ohm taps instead of the 16 Ohm taps, which results in a bit of attenuation relative to the other channels ; necessary due to greater relative EQ of the horn.

You are saying that the S2 has an increased output around the 1250 Hz range. I don't contest this, but at the same time, I have not measured what exactly the channel is now doing. The current configuration (450 - 2 KHz), was arrived at one night while woking... I just dropped everything and swapped caps and coils in a sort of gut reaction to something I had been trying to identify, which that instant became more clear to me. In the same little frenzy, I brought down the upper knee of the upper-bass horn. The result felt immediately right ... Again, I have not yet taken out the RTA and measured what either channel is now doing. When I do, I will most likely confirm the increased output of the fundamentals channel around the 1250 Hz range, at which point I will of course immediately perceive it as "problematic".

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
10-30-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 73
Post ID: 8659
Reply to: 8658
Channels, drivers design and some RTA rant.
fiogf49gjkf0d

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
Is the S3 as sensitive as the S2?

Yes, they are appearing to be the same sensitively.

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
I keep telling myself that I am almost done making horns, but I keep having ideas to try additional horns (more on that when I finally decide to do it).

Do what I did. Stop experimenting with horns and begin to actually USE your playback. If you still have an itch to “think horns” then insult others about their wrong horn moves. It keeps you hands free and fulfills your desire to exercise own findings about what works with horn.

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
Hm... It would probably become clearer to me if I had an S3 to compare with the S2. The diaphragm clamping plate of the S2 is very stout, but yes it is mechanically coupled to the heavy body of the driver (bolted right into it actually) as well as the rear cover.

And I very much hate it. I hope you have learned that super tightening of the clamping plate is not always good. However, if I use the still and very heavy Dominus cables then they apply force to the S2/S3 binging posts… that are on the very same clamping plate. It not supposes to be this way. I feel nothing, nether binging posts not the body of the driver shell have impact to the diaphragm pressing plate.

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
  If I understand correctly : With an upper knee of 2 KHz, you are suggesting that I try narrowing the band pass by moving the lower knee up to around 750 Hz (?) Hmmm... Yes I can try it, but it seems more logical to keep the 450 Hz lower knee (I like the body it adds) and to drop the upper knee a bit as you suggest above. As for beaming, I know how unlikely it seems, but I don't have beaming issues.

What I was trying to say is that if your Fundamental Channel operates before MF Channel. If your Fundamental Channel goes all the way up to 2000Hz then your MF Channel most likely kicks in at higher frequency. If your MF stars at 2000Hz then there is no need to keep it in 450Hz horn. The smaller horn would be better in this case.

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
  You are saying that the S2 has an increased output around the 1250 Hz range. I don't contest this, but at the same time, I have not measured what exactly the channel is now doing. The current configuration (450 - 2 KHz), was arrived at one night while woking... I just dropped everything and swapped caps and coils in a sort of gut reaction to something I had been trying to identify, which that instant became more clear to me. In the same little frenzy, I brought down the upper knee of the upper-bass horn. The result felt immediately right ... Again, I have not yet taken out the RTA and measured what either channel is now doing. When I do, I will most likely confirm the increased output of the fundamentals channel around the 1250 Hz range, at which point I will of course immediately perceive it as "problematic".

Well, when you go with RTA for each channel then you might see what I mean. Nowadays sufficient RTA solution is very comfortable. For MF range do not need even to be crazy and the regular build-in Laptop’s soundcards are good enough to make rough but in most cases very adequate measurement of response. All that you would need is $50 USB microphone and one of many free software. From certain perspective you do not need even calibration of your mice and your soundcard and you do not care about absolute number but you would need RTA juts to get more or less objective control over relative numbers. Your ears will calibrate the RTA that you are accustomed to use better then anything else. I am sure that people who express long words about loudspeakers would fund what I juts proposed as sacrilege but they need to understand own limitations…

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
10-30-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 74
Post ID: 8660
Reply to: 8659
MF ramblings &&&
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy wrote :

"...Do what I did. Stop experimenting with horns and begin to actually USE your playback..."

If I am in the house and not sleeping, the system is on.

"...If you still have an itch to “think horn” then insult others about their wrong horn moves. It keeps you hands free and fulfills your desire to exercise own findings about what works with horn..."

Ok, but I have one sort of radical idea that I think may really be worth trying. Once I've tried it, I will start insulting others!

"...if I use the still and very heavy Dominus cables then they apply force to the S2/S3 binging posts…"

Do what I did. Make strain reliefs for each cable using mini-bungie cords. Wrap the mini-bungie cord around the heavy cables, and attach its hooks to something on your frames (the mini-bungies come in black). I use them everywhere, including on power cords up near the component. This is the ultimate cable elevator, which I personally garentee will get you closer to Patricia's leg.

"...What I was trying to say is that if your Fundamental Channel operates before MF Channel. If your Fundamental Channel goes all the way up to 2000Hz then your MF Channel most likely kicks in at higher frequency. If your MF stars at 2000Hz then there is no need to keep it in 450Hz horn. The smaller horn would be better in this case..."

I have the upper MF channel (S2 into 400Hz horn) set up to make sound from 2KHZ and up (of course to hit this target, the filter had to be set for a much higher frequency). I did have the RTA out long enough verify that, and to know where the upper-bass, fundamentals, and MF horn were operating relative to each other.

"...I am sure that people who express long words about loudspeakers would fund what I juts proposed as sacrilege but they need to understand own limitations…"

Well I assume you mean the "pros". After this weekend at the Paris Hifi show (first one ever for me), I cannot say that I place much value in what the "pros" might think.

Man, honestly, what crap sound in most every room, including those run by the respected names of the industry.

Best was the Wilson/Audio Research room (a suit actually) : In this room was a pair of Alexandrias driven by 100% Audio Research electronics, including a pair of big "Reference 210" amps.

To their credit, the guy running this rig was playing mostly complex, large-scale orchestral music.

I was however expecting more from such a setup (around $200K, electronics + speakers). Though they are supposed to make 210 watts each, the Alexandrias actually sounded under-driven, and not able to produce live concert levels; the sort of max levels one might use at home when the wife is out shopping on a Saturday.

Nevertheless, though this room did sound best to me (which is not saying much), I walked away thinking how much potency and life the system lacked compared to what I've come to expect; and this in both the mid frequencies as well as (surprisingly) the bass.

Other expectations : I was expecting to be tempted to spend money on something at the show, but left the place sort of laughing.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
06-10-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 75
Post ID: 10748
Reply to: 2765
New options for Fundamentals channels.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:

Yes. I’m exiting to see how the new horn I shaping up. Still I do not think that it is about second orders.  Obviously in context of 5 channels system, the more channels one gets then less room between them. I still feel that in order to do it correct my new channel should be no 250Hz but I would say 180Hz-150Hz and then I would still try to for a first order at 750Hz. In the barrow bandwidth satiation as I needed to get out of this driver the second order was God sent but at think point I do not know what kind negative manifestation it would have on overall system presentation. I will be able to see it when I put the second channel in use and tune the crossover more precisely.

I went for Bessel Q, 600Hz. Since I have no sensitivity burn I’m searching now for the series air-core coil with DCR of around <0.05R and 8-6ga wires.

The Vitavox barbarianism?  Yes, I know the CN458 schematic, opened it up as studied what they were trying to do.  I do not think that it is about barbarianism but about the typical for vintage solution luck of precision, accuracy and exactness. The imaging demands that Vitavox System CN191 had were very restricted, as any other corner loaded system. Also, did you have change to measure a properly installed CN191? I did. I do not have the file now handy but I remember that each channel (!!!) did something like this:

Sure, the decision to go for second order in their 330Hz horn was correct but was in beneficial? I do not think so. 

Still, generally the compression drivers that run all the way down and crossed at 500Hz never use first order; at least I did not see it. As I told above I never used drivers at 500Hz and now I see why people go for second order in this situation. Interesting that Vitavox when for 500Hz 12dB per octave for thier 330Hz but I do not feel that it is a “secure” cut off and I went for 600Hz 12dB per octave for 250Hz horn… I feel that ~700Hz of their RH330 would be more suitable cut off.

The Cat



If you spend time to listen a Fundamental Channel alone then you know that it does not do a lot. It is a very marrow bandwidth, very much attenuated and it does not do a lot of sound but rather some useful noise. The benefit of the Fundamental Channel can’t be understood without a framework of the rest drivers. Anyhow, it is not the subject….
The subject is that Macondo uses for its Fundamental Channel a whole bloom horn channel. It certainly does not hurt but a full bloom horn channel request a lot of infrastructure to support itself and a loudspeaker like Macondo that uses a bloom horn channel for a very narrow band-pass do pay some penalties for accommodation a horn for Fundamentals. Horn is large, add a lot of height out of the system height and make the Injection Channel to be too far from the acoustic horizontal central of the speaker. (In case of Macondo the Injection Channel is large).

So, I was wondering the following: if to found a good direct radiator MF driver that will be able to substitute the Fundamental Channel horn than it would be possible to locate the direct radiator Fundamental Channel very closer to the MF and tweeter and to locate the Injection Channel much lower. The picture below is well illustrating it. The requirement for the direct radiator Fundamental Channel driver would not be difficult as it works in VERY narrow band.

Fundamentals_channels_new_options.JPG

What I am saying is not a motivation for me to change anything with Macondo but for others, who interested in advancement of the horn system configuration ideas, it might be a useful direction to think and to experiment.

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
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