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03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 76
Post ID: 15754
Reply to: 15746
Going down with bass
fiogf49gjkf0d
After a lot of extremely pleasurable listening and reviewing own expectation for bass I went down with my bass level quite significantly.  I rolled back the change in my bass amp gain and not I am at 5th click, which is about 12 dB down. So, not I am injecting in my room 8dB more then I use to do at my old bass location.

I need to say that I can add pretty much the whole 12dB of bass and it still will be fine and perfectly listenable, in fact with some music I do add 3-4dB, Do not forget the it is not bass but ULF, the sub 25Hz. Still, the 5th click is my reference level, something that I consider “proper sound”.

I think I about to close my interest in this thread. I would be theoretically interested what would happen if I move my ULF crossover point to 5dB down and what would happen is I use for ULF my larger woofers. However, I do not recognize any deficiency with my sound in lower end now. If I do then I will try something different but for now I locked up everything as is and just enjoy the ride.

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
03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Jorge
Austin TX
Posts 141
Joined on 10-17-2010

Post #: 77
Post ID: 15755
Reply to: 15754
Under FS
fiogf49gjkf0d
This si very interesting thread for me, just a couple of points more;

I heard a bass driver can be cut under its resonant frequency,  this will allow the driver to go much lower.
Say a huge pro paper woofer with FS at 35 hz: we could use it as ULF channel from 25-30 hz down with open bottom.
I have a pair of nice drivers I will try to run a few tests this week.

Another point; we all know the wonders UHF does, say a tweeter up to 40khz, The few experiments I have done with ULF make me belive the same effect is in order, giving mid range and even highs a better integration and intelligibility to instruments.

I was digging out this old interesting thread:

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?postID=3674#3674

"A basshorn should pressurize the room and create an environment that allows the MF to be “floated” ATOP of basshorn’s pressuranization. Thy basshorn’s out should act like a high density liquid that would permit the low density liquid (MF and HF) do not sink and to fly freely in a room. However, as soon the LF begin to inflict a listener with own ‘"pulsating room effect" then the value of LF should be minimized"
03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
oxric
Posts 194
Joined on 02-12-2010

Post #: 78
Post ID: 15756
Reply to: 15747
Ideal ULF/Midbass integration
fiogf49gjkf0d


Hi Roberts, Romy and others,

Before this thread vanishes in undeserved obscurity, I have a question or two for you. I understand that the issue is a complex one and should be addressed with more care and paying attention to detail than I am doing here, but I would like to know your thoughts as the situation bears some similarities to the one discussed here and it might be worth picking your minds when the issues have been freshly discussed. It will be some months before I have the time to set up my system in this room, so this is not remotely a hypothetical question, but given that the house is in France and I am presently in the UK, I cannot attempt several different solutions before actually having to move in with what I hope is the solution with the best chance of success.

So what is the definition of success for me as far as the lowest bass is concerned? Well, it works on two levels at least, not surprisingly. It must pressure the whole room uniformly, be capable of integrating with what'shappening in the music without either attracting attention to itself unduly or indeed by its absence. This is the common feeling I have with 90% of all systems out there, that the lowest octave is simply missing.

In an ideal world, I would like my bass to be happy with a dedicated 50w of tube amplification if at all possible. I am a great believer in a homogeneous tone throughout the entire frequency range and the tube I will be using to start with (6C33C) can produce a maximum of 40-50W in a good design. Therefore my second level definition of success, although I am comfortable with the idea that it may not be achievable, would be a ULF solution that would not need more than 40-50W at full power to give peak listening volumes of 90-95 db although I never play that loud in practice, the courtesies of social living being what they are, and I am mindful of the dangers of hearing damage to young children, who get habituated to listening to high volume levels. Achieving this is my definition of success at level 2.

We are dealing with a rectangular room of about 6.5m by 7.5m but with a ceiling height of  2.4-2.5m in a very old townhouse where the walls are made of stone and probably no less than a metre thick everywhere. I have considered (theoretically) several solutions and the one that I favoured for a while was an infinite baffle for ULF (15-40Hz) but that would require the temporary loss of a 5 centuries old wine cellar which I am, understandably reluctant to do. 

My second solution was a 'line array' of 2x6 Scanspeak drivers (the elegant unobtrusive solution), or possibly 6x18" McCauley 6174 (equivalent to 20 Scanspeaks) or even 6x21" Maelstroms (equivalent to 27 scanspeaks) unless McCauley somehow can be convinced to sell their 21" woofer separately). Obviously the position and implementation of this type of solution is so dependent on the mid-bass channel that I may well mention it. If this is the solution, I would not have a midbass channel, much as I would love to, as I could not accomodate such a channel and devote only part of the room to my playback which I would like to be part of the main family room, and not overwhelm it entirely. In my much smaller current room, I am able to achieve this by keeping all my equipment restricted to three racks in a different room. In my new bigger room, unfortunately all the equipment racks will have to be inside the room itself.

I am not prejudiced to any form of solution, provided it works, and the last possibility I was looking at was two dual tapped horns that would fit in the room corners and then maybe have two 3.5m midbass horns along the side walls. On paper, this solution is appealing, and I CAN SEE A NUMBER OF ADVANTAGES TO THIS. I have read that Eric of Volvotreter in Germany and maybe John Hasquin are proponents of tapped horns, but I am worried they may suffer from the same problems that I have so far associated with all ported enclosure and transmission line designs that I have heard (in fact I own dipole subwoofers(Mirage BPS400), ported speakers (Spendor BC1), IMF TL80 (transmission line) and must say that I now harbour serious doubts regarding these solutions on the basis of their specific topology.

Roberts, I read carefully your pertinent, clear and helpful observations in your above post and wonder whether you might clarify or expand on a couple of points you made that, idiot that I am, could not follow as well as I would have liked. Here goes:

 RF at Ona wrote:

When two loudspeaker drivers are placed close together they become acoustically coupled and so more efficient than when spaced well apart. On in-phase signals, two closely placed drivers would play louder in the bandwidth where they are acoustically coupled but have significant destructive interference for out-of-phase signals. I think this might well apply to the mid-bass horns.



Robert, I would think this would not be a problem if the ULF signals were summed and the identical 'mono' signal sent to both channels. We can thus enjoy the benefit of increased efficiency whilst staying away from the problem of cancellation of out-of-phase signals.

 RF at Ona wrote:

In addition to these effects, on in-phase signals the pair of midbass horns might also function something like a two-sector horn where the combined mouth area determines the low frequency cut-off. The low frequency cutoff would be lower for the two horns running in-phase signals than for a single horn.



Robert, bluntly, this is maybe a good thing, yet another benefit of close placement of mid-bass horns, as you get two for the price of one, that is lower frequency cut-off. Does that suggest and in your experience, would this mean that two 50Hz horns would actually act as a single 40Hz horn? Like anyone in this hobby, I like getting something for free, but is this lower frequency cut-off really free and without downside (other than  catching one unawares in planning mid-bass+ULF integration).

 RF at Ona wrote:

Now the same issues and analysis applies to your woofer towers and with the new placement of the towers some of these effects may have become exposed.

If these effects are significant than your new wider spaced ULF towers might actually be functioning more effectively in their upper range than the midbass horns in their lower range on stereo recordings with phase differences between the channels in this frequency range.



I am not too clear about 'their upper range.' Do you mean that the lower range of the ULF towers are in principle compromised because this is an area where they overlap the upper range of the mid-bass channel and therefore the area where we have in-phase summation and out-of-phase cancellation (across the whole 42-500Hz of the mid-bass channels I would say)?

 RF at Ona wrote:

Because of the low-pass roll-off on the ULF you may have found that a significantly elevated gain for the ULF is improving the music reproduction where the mid-bass horns have unwanted cancellation effects.



If the above is happening to a significant degree, then the comment here probably follows and does not need clarification. However I would still be grateful if you would expand on the reasons why this is so. It might help others who missed out on their physics classes when they were looking at the properties of soundwaves in secondary school.

 RF at Ona wrote:

But this elevated gain does not hurt the reproduction of the ambient/environmental sounds intended to be reproduced by the ULF towers because these sounds are much less sensitive to output level than the musical signal.



Oops. You are going too fast! This is the reason where I disagreed most with Romy earlier, although maybe it came out as a disagreement in approach to music reproduction generally. Intuitively, I think Romy is right but intellectually, I do not follow why we (that is Romy above and I think you, and prabably Bill, seem to do so as well) make a distinction between ambience informations and other musical signals which inhabit the same frequency range. I would like to undertand this better. Further, why separate ambience information in such an arbitrary fashion? Applause that Romy mentions above does not live in either ULF or midbass, see link below:

  http://obiwannabe.co.uk/tutorials/html/tutorial_applause.html

In brief we are looking at 700Hz, 1300Hz-3KHZ, when we look at the complex frequencies inhabited by applause (male, females, groups, different clapping rythms all have implications for the produced frequencies but non in the mid-lower bass regions). I would say that ambience information inhabits generally everywhere where you can potentially have the musical signal per se.



 RF at Ona wrote:

How significant these effects are in practice are less clear. Stereo phono records usually become quite monaural in the low frequency range to facilitate both cutting the master and playback tracking. CDs and other modern digital sources may have enough out-of-phase bass for the coupling/cancellation effects to be noticeable.



Roberts, I like the way you reason. This is the final touch to a line of reasoning that was not too difficult to follow but in concluding with this point, shows such an excellent insight in the whole process that I understand again why I amongst others like to read here.

Best regards
Rakesh

03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 79
Post ID: 15759
Reply to: 15755
My super smart room!
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Jorge wrote:
However, as soon the LF begin to inflict a listener with own ‘"pulsating room effect" then the volume of LF should be minimized"

Here is where the beauty of my new room to the play. Where I was “selecting” this room via my Real Estate search it was exactly what I was trying to accomplish – to have a room with a lot of cavities and open space for bass to “escape”. This room has an amazing capacity to dissipate ULF. If you overload a normal room with ULF then it begins to “pulsate” with ULF and Bass. My room, at least with my ULF tower positioned as they, are the room just do not get saturate with ULF. From my reference ULF level I might add +20dB, I think even more, and it still veil be very much listenable sound. It will be heavy, it will be VERY large, and VERY full of nervosa but it will be very evenly heavy with no signs of bass non-linearity.  This was in a way what I was looking but I did not anticipate that it will be so effective.
 


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
oxric
Posts 194
Joined on 02-12-2010

Post #: 80
Post ID: 15760
Reply to: 15756
Erratum ( or errata if you insist)
fiogf49gjkf0d
 oxric wrote:


 RF at Ona wrote:

Now the same issues and analysis applies to your woofer towers and with the new placement of the towers some of these effects may have become exposed.

If these effects are significant than your new wider spaced ULF towers might actually be functioning more effectively in their upper range than the midbass horns in their lower range on stereo recordings with phase differences between the channels in this frequency range.



I am not too clear about 'their upper range.' Do you mean that the lower range of the ULF towers are in principle compromised because this is an area where they overlap the upper range of the mid-bass channel and therefore the area where we have in-phase summation and out-of-phase cancellation (across the whole 42-500Hz of the mid-bass channels I would say)?



The last part in italic is based on an incorrect reading of your comment quoted here. The whole paragraph should be scrapped to read:

I am not too clear about 'their upper range' of the ULF towers functioning 'more effectively'. Do you mean that the ULF towers do not suffer from cancellation (because of positioning and distance apart) to the same degree as the mid-bass horns in this same range because of the cancellation issues mentioned earlier, and this results in the former making up for the weakness in the latter?

Regards
Rakesh

03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 81
Post ID: 15761
Reply to: 15756
The issue is a complex one and should not be addressed generically ...
fiogf49gjkf0d
 oxric wrote:
I have a question ..... I understand that the issue is a complex one and should be addressed with more care and paying attention to detail ...

Oxric,

The issue is a complex, very complex but only if to try to predict behavior. If however do not try to forecast then truly there is no complexity, in fact everything is very easy: you do the things, you observe the resulting Sound and you react upon the result. I think I got good result but I can hardly take credit for it – it just happened. Yes, a result is in away an outcome of my navigation but success is not to do right things but rather avoiding to do wrong things… I wish I know ahead what is wrong.

Anyhow, if you ask about strategy to implement ULF then it is an interesting question. I do feel that a playback sound has to be built first and then ULF has to be added as a compliment to a proper sound of playback. Might be I feel this way because it was mine way, or might be it might serve as universal rule. I do not know. The way how I trained myself is to disconnect channels. While I was making Macondo, installing it, moving it and experimenting with it I was frequently disconnecting channels and was listening “what was left”. I like to think about sound as additions and subtractions.

The most interesting subject however is to go for bass and ULF or to have an integrated bass.  For years I used integrated where two bass channels did anything used 73Hz. What I have now is more advanced but take a look at the cost and the efforts. Saying all of it I need to admit that the bass that I use to have in my old room and the bass I have now is very much same type of sound. I did not have frustration with the bass then and if I did not move I would gladly use that integrated bass as my old room did not need and would not handle ULF.

So, ULF and the specific ULF topology is not something that required by Sound but rather is something that is demeaned by listed and permitted by room. Therefore any generalizations is very hard to do.

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
03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
oxric
Posts 194
Joined on 02-12-2010

Post #: 82
Post ID: 15762
Reply to: 15761
Cost benefit analysis of midbass horns v/s compromised ULF
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:


I do feel that a playback sound has to be built first...The way how I trained myself is to disconnect channels. While I was making Macondo, installing it, moving it and experimenting with it I was frequently disconnecting channels and was listening “what was left”. I like to think about sound as additions and subtractions.

The caT


Romy,

I thought this might be your reaction, and when practicable, this is what I do, build a playback and incrementally address its failings. I do not do enough of individual channel listening and in the future, especially in my new room, I will do so more frequently as a matter of course, as I find it is a powerful tool in understanding the strengths and particularities of a channel. 

 Romy the Cat wrote:


Anyhow, if you ask about strategy to implement ULF then it is an interesting question...What I have now is more advanced but take a look at the cost and the efforts...

The most interesting subject however is to go for bass and ULF or to have an integrated bass

The caT


In my mind, and given my specific circumstances, the question of strategy is inextricably tied to the resources in terms of time, efforts and funds that I will be able to devote to this attempt to achieve what I have in mind and what for me will be my one and last playback. Just as you navigated to your present system having at least some elements which heightened the chances of success, I would like to at least initially attempt a solution with an increased chance of success. And this is why I am asking whether anyone, based on his or her particular experience, would try one or another solution first. I am torn between using Scanspeak (or McCauley/Maelstrom in that configuration), which means I need to not worry about midbass or try to go for something as unobtrusive as tapped horns in the room corners and have time aligned midbass along the left and right walls.

I do not have the first-hand experience of a midbass horn that would enable me to decide whether a possibly compromised ULF channel is an appropriate price to pay for the inclusion of  mid-bass horns. So let me rephrase my question Romy, if that was the choice that faced you, what would you do?

 Romy the Cat wrote:
I did not have frustration with the bass then and if I did not move I would gladly use that integrated bass as my old room did not need and would not handle ULF.

So, ULF and the specific ULF topology is not something that required by Sound but rather is something that is demeaned by listed and permitted by room. Therefore any generalizations is very hard to do.

The caT


Romy, I thought you always had ULF, even in your old room, just not the superior dynamics and I imagine voicing that you now have with the midbass horns, not to mention the increased ability to fine-tune the different bass channels.

And one other thing, if the drivers for the mid-bass horns are physically further behind their time-aligned position, do you think there is a way (not using a digital equaliser) that would enable me to deal with delay issues? Or all in all, I would then be better placed having the horns postioned behind me along the walls but time-aligned? 


Regards
Rakesh
03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 83
Post ID: 15763
Reply to: 15762
There is no cost-benefit analysis for this thing.
fiogf49gjkf0d

 oxric wrote:
In my mind, and given my specific circumstances, the question of strategy is inextricably tied to the resources in terms of time, efforts and funds that I will be able to devote to this attempt to achieve what I have in mind and what for me will be my one and last playback. Just as you navigated to your present system having at least some elements which heightened the chances of success, I would like to at least initially attempt a solution with an increased chance of success.

I absolutely assure you that all of it act identical for everyone, regardless any specific circumstances. Of cose everyone would like  to “increased chance of success” but because the behavior of your room at ULF is absolutely not known, even for you, to make any prediction is imposable.

 oxric wrote:
I am torn between using Scanspeak (or McCauley/Maelstrom in that configuration), which means I need to not worry about midbass or try to go for something as unobtrusive as tapped horns in the room corners and have time aligned midbass along the left and right walls.

And I hope that you do not expect me or anybody else to answer this question? Do you need my or anybody advise about about marriage, investment and etc… Be advised that there are VERY few people who would try all 3 direction you sketched. Usually people try one direction and then work with it in order to have whatever they chose to work. Again, it all would be greatly depending from your room. Remember, bass is sound. ULF impact mostly reverberation time then actual sound. ULF will not work in small room as the room will give own gain in ULF region, this gain will have very short decay time however.

 oxric wrote:
So let me rephrase my question Romy, if that was the choice that faced you, what would you do?

Move in new room, put in there any speakers, then encased bass in the room and observe what the room can handle. Then would make a judgment what topology of bass would better highlight best part of the properties and hide the bad properties.

 oxric wrote:
Romy, I thought you always had ULF, even in your old room, just not the superior dynamics and I imagine voicing that you now have with the midbass horns, not to mention the increased ability to fine-tune the different bass channels.

Nope, I never had them. I had mono ULF for very short period of time 9-10 year back as an experiment only but it never was a part of Macondo before, nor was it necessary in my old room.

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
03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
oxric
Posts 194
Joined on 02-12-2010

Post #: 84
Post ID: 15764
Reply to: 15763
I will experiment.
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy,

Of course you are right. I would not expect you to advise me on whom to marry.

I will indeed experiment as I was always planning to. I will place my speakers and play them, listen to the room, get naked, dance a little dance and hope for inspiration...

As to the alleged unlikelihood of people not having tried all the three different possibilities I mentioned, you might be surprised. If I had had the room and the resources 10 years ago, I already would have.

Chances are I will as I research the best way to exploit the different possibilities offered by my room. And if someone asks me what I think, I am sure I will be willing to share even if only to shed some light, in what I regard as our common endeavour to achieve a better quality of sound reproduction in our room, be it a living room, a great room, a dedicated room, a listening room, a treated room, a small room, a ULF deficient or impotent room, one with cathedral ceilings or just a cave...


Regards
Rakesh
03-12-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 85
Post ID: 15765
Reply to: 15764
Sometimes experiment is not just experiment.
fiogf49gjkf0d
My Freudian subject line is not just phraseology but something that does make a lot of sense to me. It is my sentiment that audio people are not familiar with proper bass reproduction and have wrong expectations how bass shall sound by playback. Experimentation with bass and with ULF channel give an opportunity to refine own expectation and teach how to listen/reproduce lower octaves in audio. Yes, it helps to see what other do and hear many other installations and to pay attention what work for bass and what does not. I did plenty of it but frankly the biggest lessons I learned by experiment with bass in my own room. This process of sophistication own expectation never stop BTW, you always come to new and new realizations and all that you need is to make a judgment if you would like to go for the implementation of your new realizations…

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
03-13-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
RF at Ona
Posts 12
Joined on 05-29-2007

Post #: 86
Post ID: 15766
Reply to: 15756
One Bass Horn or Two – for Oxric
fiogf49gjkf0d

Rakesh,
Thank you for your kind remarks. I appreciate the close scrutiny you have given my previous post but I think you are at a stage of system design where many basics of your system should be considered and evaluated before the issues of my post need be considered - if ever. My remarks were more in the nature of optimizing a well-developed system and discovering how that system interacts with itself than with a fundamental design critique.

However, I would like to offer some thoughts that are relevant to the issues you’ve raised.

ONE BASS HORN OR TWO
Several of your questions essentially revolve around a basic issue to your system design – if you have space for (mid)bass horns should you try for a single horn with a larger mouth and lower cutoff frequency or two smaller horns running in stereo.

This was a question I was going to pose to Romy in the design phase of his midbass horns. He originally considered using the horns into a range much higher than he does now and where both stereo imaging and localization effects might be less acceptable. He rather quickly found the strengths of his midbass horns were in a lower range.

If you end up with a pair of bass horns next to each other it may not matter too much whether you design for two or a single horn as you might get the positive effects of a single horn but you may also get unwanted cancellation of out-of phase bass signals. Summing the bass signals electrically does no good – it merely electrically cancels the out-of phase signals instead of acoustically canceling them. Fortunately, as I mentioned in my earlier post, we are somewhat protected against out-of-phase deep bass signals by a variety of recording practices over the years. So closely placed bass horns might not be so bad.

Furthermore, I am not on the strongest theoretical ground here as I am not sure if the separation of the horns should be considered the separation of their acoustical centers (normally true) or their perimeter closeness (relevant for some analytical approaches). In analyzing woofer drivers the size of the driver is very small compared to bass wavelengths but for the large mouth of the bass horns this distinction may be important. The only practical experience I have had of speakers this size is of large panel speakers. When panel speakers are placed together the effect of the larger baffle size and reduced dipole cancellation effects were of prime importance. So I would need to listen to knowledgeable people with practical experience of large horns or be prepared to research the issue myself.

It comes down to a choice between extending the sound quality that you value in horns or attempting to preserve the stereo signal in a frequency range (below 100hz) with limited stereo information both as recorded and as perceived. Of course, there are alternative approaches.


PRESERVING STEREO WITH A MONO BASS HORN
There is a technique for fully reproducing stereo while using a low frequency mono speaker along with a regular stereo pair. This technique can be used with a subwoofer or a midbass speaker where the prime signal is carried by the mono speaker and the more limited stereo information is reproduced by the stereo pair.

It uses both the sum and the difference of the left and right signals.

SUMMING BASS SIGNALS:
Be careful here. As I mentioned above, if you only sum the bass channels you will cancel the out-of-phase signals electrically before they reach the loudspeaker. That is really not what you want. You want to preserve the stereo out-of-phase information so that it reaches the listener and propagates throughout the room to create the reflection/reverberation pattern you have designed or accepted in the room. If you ever pushed the mono button on a pre-amp or receiver and noticed that the bass went flat you have an example of the problem with a simple summing. I have sometimes preferred using just one channel or the other instead of summing to mono.

THE SUM/DIFFERENCE TECHNIQUE
Create both a sum and a difference signal from the original left and right signals:
Sum = Left + Right = (L+R)    (mono)
Difference = Left - Right = (L-R)    (stereo info)

A central woofer or bass horn carries the monaural sum signal which is the principal component in the bass.

The stereo speakers carry the difference signals which acoustically combine with the sum signal from the mono horn to recreate the stereo left/right signal at the listener.

Mono Horn + Left speaker  = (L+R) + (L-R) = 2L  (i.e. the true left channel signal)
Mono Horn + Right speaker = (L+R) – (L-R)  = 2R  (true right channel signal)
(Note the change of polarity on the right channel difference signal)

Consider how this could be used in Romy’s system,

His midbass horns would both carry the identical sum (L+R) signal so a single horn could have been used instead.

Romy’s bass towers in the new spaced, time-aligned positions would carry not only the ULF but also the stereo signals (L-R) to complement the monaural midbass horn, which should acoustically sum at the listener to the original stereo signals.

By the way, this is an old technique. Alan Blumlein used a variant in one part of his original patent on stereo. He used specially wound transformers to create the sum/difference signals. Today we use op-amps or circuits with differential stages like a Darlington (long-tailed) pair.


FINAL THOUGHT ON AMBIENCE
You wondered about trying to reproduce ambience/environmental sounds at an elevated level. I agree completely with you that sounds like applause, reverberation and general room noise which are part of the recorded sound in the audible bandwidth should be reproduced at the same level as the music. I don’t know how to do it otherwise without creating ambience effects artificially.

I interpret Romy’s findings to relate only to SUBAUDIBLE sounds – sound which lies below our general low frequency hearing. These subaudible sounds need to be quite loud to be even be classified as above the threshold of hearing. I suspect Romy is finding a range of loudness for these sounds which is barely at or below literal hearing but can be perceived or felt. I am not sure if he is compensating for low frequency roll-off in the recording or discovering a way of enhancing the sense of space or acoustic volume with a perceptional trick of hyper-elevating the subaudible sounds. He seems to be convinced that this technique enhances the music reproduction even beyond the sense of acoustic space. I have experienced the beneficial effects of deep bass reproduction and as Romy and others have indicated even without music the awareness of the acoustical space is enhanced. These experiences involved reproduction of the subaudible signal at the same level as the audible bandwidth so Romy’s technique of hyper-elevating the subaudible is new to me.

Regards,
Robert

03-13-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 87
Post ID: 15767
Reply to: 15766
My ways to mimic Reality.
fiogf49gjkf0d

I am trying to keep the discussion about midbass horns out of ULF thread, I guess if Rakesh would like he can create a separate thread dedicated to his specific installation and the design ideas. I would like to keep the content of the posts more or less related to the subject of the thread.

Very briefly. I never had doubts one midbass horn or two. Sure the proximity of the horns is liability and I well know how they need to be position to be “proper”. There we have the real word of making the horns that would not destroy living hood and become invisible in room. This is where I feel any estimates and predictions fails- you build what you want to build and then deal with consequences. The monophonic position of my midbass horn doe has own toll but it is imposable to share what is right and what is wrong- all negatives and positive very much mixed together in one presentation. Also, the system is very much optimized to play with this type midbass horns the upperbass horns made do not work linearly but they a bit overshoot.  The result is that upperbass horns take over the attention from midbass horns and listening the installation without ULF you clearly hear the midbass notes as they are coming from front-located upperbass horns. It is very-very nice and in a way unbelievable. Even without using the ULF the location of midbass horns appears to be not identifiable. Dose the midbass horns semi-mono location has an impact to the “width” of playback. Yes it dose and I did clerlay expressed it in posts what I played with idea of width modulation channels. However, the width channel that I described was not because the midbass horn but because some upper MF cancelations, the cancelations that ULF has fixed. Still, the midbass horns are where they are and they are where I would like them to be. In my view there is no need in prediction of sonic results and to use those predictions as stimulation or contra-encouragement for building the horns itself. A midbass horn is like a child – it is perfectly possible that you son will become a serial killer. Still, it is not what you think when you consider to have a child. You conceive the concept and then do your best in order you son do not become a serial killer. The very same with such a large architectural project as midbass horn – it will be the result of your steering to the most part.

Now back to the ULF topic. I was thinking about use of R and L delta (I have the sum and stereo delta in my R&S multiplex decoder) but very fast discard this idea. To use phase injection means to interact with the original signal. It does have benefits but it also degrades “direct” sound as well. How to assess what kind injection is beneficial and what kind sound deterioration is still acceptable? I am staging on position that if the main signal is compromised in ANY way then whenever is being done is not usable.  The Macondo capacity is very high and it is very “clean” of you know what I mean. You hear pretty much what you hear with good headphones only much more in terms of tone, space and imaging. For instance I have Dorrough modulation meter that has 2meg input impedance. You understand that adding 2mR cable to 16R speaks has to have absolutely no impact. In fact I use in on my MF channel and I see no difference. However, to use the same meter on midbass channel does affect sound very negatively. Now, to add to my system another devise with 2-3 active stages that would do phase prosing I feel will be too damaging and I would like to keep the path as sort and non-compromised as possible. Do not forget the a few years back I was not able to make a 0 gain buffers that would be transparent enough.

I do feel that what Robert propose might be experimented and use but NOT at the design stage. The design concepts need to relay upon dealing with straight signals. Then, after the straight operating playback is set, then one can see what else might be done and how different intentional additions work against the non-compromised signals.

In the end - a comment about “reproduction of the subaudible signal at the same level as the audible bandwidth”. It is not necessarily what it is.  There is no same level, hyper-elevating level or elevated level. When we hear live sound then we have no “level of space” and we subconsciously get the messages about “space” from naturally-long reverberation time, from visual aspect and from another sensors.  Recordings does not have this information, the listening rooms has near close decay time is necessary (The Symphony Hall in Boston has drop at 60dB for 1.5 seconds), not to mention that ULF information is severely distorted on recording. So, the idea is do not correlate the ULF messages with auditable signal but to separate them and to run ULF at the level that creates SIMILAR sensation as it happens during live event. The keys in it to have ULF do not affect the audible signals, to have a feasibility of ULF level, to have front of ULF time-aligned, to have the ULF leading edge as compressed and sharp as possible, to have a room that will be able to dissipate the ULF decay evenly. So, it is not about levels in terms of dB equalization but rather about of equity of perception.  I do not even know what the objective level of my ULF. My ULF is higher than it would be with a linear single driver that would 20Hz-20kHz bandwidth but who said that linearity is a part Reality? I so not even mention that in audio we do not deal with  Reality but we deal with very barbaric ways to mimic Reality…

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
03-13-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
oxric
Posts 194
Joined on 02-12-2010

Post #: 88
Post ID: 15768
Reply to: 15766
Patent GB 394,325. "Transmitting, recording, and reproducing music..."
fiogf49gjkf0d
Robert,

Many thanks for the clear exposition of the technicalities to consider in making what is on the face of it such a simple choice.

I however disagree that the points being considered here, as both you and Romy seem to suggest, only ought to be considered, 'if ever,' after an evolved system of audio reproduction should be in play. Discounting the fact that it implies that my present system is not 'well-developed,' I still think that a complete novice has something to gain by such considerations. Not having ever owned a horn-loaded loudspeaker system, I am able to consider such possibilities as having one bigger or two smaller horns at an early stage, and this cannot be a bad thing and might enable me to keep open opportunities that I might have rendered unachievable by other infelicitous choices in the meantime. With the number of variables that goes into the design of such a playback, I have to the utmost faith in the ability of the intellect to process the information, and steer one's course towards an ultimately satisfying playback. 

 RF at Ona wrote:

By the way, this is an old technique. Alan Blumlein used a variant in one part of his original patent on stereo. He used specially wound transformers to create the sum/difference signals. Today we use op-amps or circuits with differential stages like a Darlington (long-tailed) pair.



For the small story, I have lived in Hayes at a time, which is where Alan Dower Blumlein lived in the early 30s with his wife, and where he came up with the ideas that eventually gave us stereo as per patent GB 394,325. He was 28 at the time and two years earlier had already invented  the moving-coil disc cutting head, but would die within 10 years.  I have read the patent, with which I cannot say that I was previously familiar, and am baffled that at a time when stereo was not even born, he considers therein issues which form the basis of still ongoing debate and unresolved issues 80 years on.

http://v3.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/biblio?CC=GB&NR=394325&KC=&FT=E


What an awe-inspiring mind!

 RF at Ona wrote:

...I have experienced the beneficial effects of deep bass reproduction and as Romy and others have indicated even without music the awareness of the acoustical space is enhanced. These experiences involved reproduction of the subaudible signal at the same level as the audible bandwidth so Romy’s technique of hyper-elevating the subaudible is new to me.



Given what I said before, I can only agree with this. However, I have read further prompted by the reference to Alan Blumlein, into ideas such as crosstalk and the views of Richard Brice, who was behind the now discontinued Francinstien, see some very interesting reading below,

http://www.richardbrice.net/franci.htm

I think that Romy, who being Romy, does not care about what anyone thinks, is addressing some of these fundamental issues in his own inimitable style without compromising other aspects of his playback that he values enormously.

Regards
Rakesh

03-13-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
oxric
Posts 194
Joined on 02-12-2010

Post #: 89
Post ID: 15769
Reply to: 15767
"the purpose of playing, whose end both at the first and now..."
fiogf49gjkf0d

 Romy the Cat wrote:

Dose the midbass horns semi-mono location has an impact to the “width” of playback. Yes it dose and I did clerlay expressed it in posts what I played with idea of width modulation channels.



Romy, I think that I now understand better what you are trying to achieve and yes it is a very complex area.

 Romy the Cat wrote:

I do feel that what Robert propose might be experimented and use but NOT at the design stage. The design concepts need to relay upon dealing with straight signals. Then, after the straight operating playback is set, then one can see what else might be done and how different intentional additions work against the non-compromised signals.



I respectfully beg to differ. See my previous post on the question of what to consider at the design stage. Of course, short and straight signal paths must always remain a priority but this does not mean that these spects of playback ought not to be considered at the very earliest stage. I would go so far as to suggest that you yourself considered these very issues at a very early stage before you had even made an offer on your new house. 


 Romy the Cat wrote:

In the end - a comment about “reproduction of the subaudible signal at the same level as the audible bandwidth”. It is not necessarily what it is.  There is no same level, hyper-elevating level or elevated level. When we hear live sound then we have no “level of space” and we subconsciously get the messages about “space” from naturally-long reverberation time, from visual aspect and from another sensors.  Recordings does not have this information, the listening rooms has near close decay time is necessary (The Symphony Hall in Boston has drop at 60dB for 1.5 seconds), not to mention that ULF information is severely distorted on recording. So, the idea is do not correlate the ULF messages with auditable signal but to separate them and to run ULF at the level that creates SIMILAR sensation as it happens during live event. The keys in it to have ULF do not affect the audible signals, to have a feasibility of ULF level, to have front of ULF time-aligned, to have the ULF leading edge as compressed and sharp as possible, to have a room that will be able to dissipate the ULF decay evenly. So, it is not about levels in terms of dB equalization but rather about of equity of perception.  I do not even know what the objective level of my ULF. My ULF is higher than it would be with a linear single driver that would 20Hz-20kHz bandwidth but who said that linearity is a part Reality? I so not even mention that in audio we do not deal with  Reality but we deal with very barbaric ways to mimic Reality…


Hamlet:

Be not too tame neither, but let your own discretion be your

tutor. Suit the action to the word, the word to the action, with this
special observance, that you o'erstep not the modesty of nature. For
anything so o'erdone is from the purpose of playing, whose end both
at the first and now, was and is, to hold as 'twere, the mirror up
to nature; to show virtue her own feature, scorn her own image,
and the very age and body of the time his form and pressure. Now
this overdone, or come tardy off, though it make the unskilful
laugh, cannot but make the judicious grieve, the censure of the
which one must in your allowance o'erweigh a whole theatre of
others.

Hamlet
(3.2.1-16-28)

Romy, I understand much better your position now and as you said, without actually listening to the results, it must be impossible to form a definite view one way or another. I would however surmise that irrespective of how successful your implementation of your ideas have turned out to be, there is a risk that one paints very different recordings, made in the most varied conditions, using widely varying techniques, and engineered God knows according to how many different recipes, all with the same brush and end up like Hamlet warns, in his exhortation to a travelling band of actors, 'overstepping' what's on the record to recreate what may not have been either at the performance or on the record in the first place.

 Romy the Cat wrote:

I am trying to keep the discussion about midbass horns out of ULF thread, I guess if Rakesh would like he can create a separate thread dedicated to his specific installation and the design ideas. I would like to keep the content of the posts more or less related to the subject of the thread.



I should have done (started a new thread) but I thought, maybe mistakenly, the query I had was so closely connected that it was somehow relevant.

I apologise to all for having, in what looks like a very cavalier fashion, but this was not the intention, taken this thread off its course.

Regards
Rakesh


03-13-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 90
Post ID: 15770
Reply to: 15769
No manuals for those things….
fiogf49gjkf0d
Rakesh,

I think you’re doing a strategic mistake. You see, there is no manual in those things. As much as you are trying to come up with one it still will be no manual in the end. Reading this site one might think that by venture of my site I have built some kind of manual build is a very wrong view. The true and the only available “manual” is a set of person’s mental perceptional values, and this has no projection to audio implementations.

I do not think that “rules” that you are trying to create for yourself during “design” stage are useful. Look at the Robert’s proposal to cross-feed midbass horn with inverted phase. There were so mach thinking about it and so many ideas how differently it might be done. I even considered to run two bass Melquiades connected in series with both midbass woofers and to regulate a crosstalk with a resistor to center point. Warn you that it would not be the wide-band cross-feed (wish always craps and no useful in serious audio) but DSET cross-feed – very different animal. The point is that all of it imposable to assess before the fact of building and testing the things. All of those things might be tested, in my view ONLY after the proper default sound in the rooms is made and recognized. It is like playing tennis, if you right-hand player then you can practice some kind sophisticated top-spin strike by left hand but to be a fine player you need to be able to have a stable and reliable left play holding you paddle in your default right hand.
 
The notion of testing of the result is NOT only the testing the implementation concept but also testing of yourself, own perception and using the achieved results as own navigation points to expend your own mind of what is possible.

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
03-18-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 91
Post ID: 15794
Reply to: 15706
More about Rotary ULF idea.
fiogf49gjkf0d

There is site out dedicated it infinite baffles subwoofers. I am not sure how serious they are as they use mostly metal in rubber drivers as got thrilled when “Apollo 13 takeoff, my doors move back and forth 1/2", and the  frequency is below 5 hz”. Taken from here:

http://ibsubwoofers.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=general&action=display&thread=8

Still they have a few threes about Rotary ULF idea

http://video.google.ca/videoplay?docid=-7885139890934147401

What particularly interests me was that somebody told:

“Note that there have been other 'rotary' drivers (Tom Danley created one). Bruce's is the first to work in this maner (varying the pitch of rotating group of blades according to frequency) .”

http://ibsubwoofers.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=stuff&action=display&thread=656

I did not know that Danley has a product in ULF world.

I do don’t know if I have an interest in Rotary driver to use in my playback but I am for sure would like to experiment with one. The problem is that this thing might need to have infinite baffle configuration and my house do not have the firmness to handle it.

I have a bass devil-machine with wish I tested the construction of my house. I am taking about Sunfire cube subwoofer that I have. Sonically it is worthless thing but it cap pump insigne amount of LF pressure into the room and to let observe how the room deals with it. If I deal with something like Rotary ULF idea then I would need to do some structural modification in my room – something that I do not look forward to do. Still, if somebody know an example of sensible people with non-barbaric demands and reference in sound who have implemented the Rotary ULF idea then it might be interesting to hear from 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
03-18-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
miab
Canada
Posts 46
Joined on 02-07-2008

Post #: 92
Post ID: 15800
Reply to: 15794
Phoenix Gold Cyclone
fiogf49gjkf0d

Awhile back I had a conversation via email with Tom Danley concerning the Phoenix Gold Cyclone that he developed for Phoenix Gold and the car audio market. They were not well built by Phoenix Gold with some crucial parts made of plastic (although he spec'd aluminum in his prototype) and were not able to withstand the forces for long. They eventually started to rub making them useless. He did have a larger prototype that he had hoped to eventually come back to market with but I have not heard of it being realized. 

In a particular experiment with these smaller cyclone rotary woofer he was able to have response flat to 10hz with it being vented to a crawlspace. That was just one rotary woofer. It had a fs around 10hz.  It also had no power compression as the wire part (wound on the stationary
laminations) takes 30 min to heat up instead of 5 or 10 seconds or so for a voice coil.

It would be interesting to find out if the larger ones he prototyped will eventually be built but I think his tapped horn ULF boxes worked out so well for him that it might have sidetracked him.

03-22-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 93
Post ID: 15822
Reply to: 14457
Passing the waves…. as usual....
fiogf49gjkf0d

In context of my resent observation and my desire to get more softness from my lower bass:

 http://www.GoodSoundClub.com/TreeItem.aspx?PostID=15814

I spoke last night with a friend of mind who pitched me very interesting idea. I told him that although I do have very good low bass but I do register some alien event. I gave him an example of drifting in sea on your back during a nigh and no moon, no stats, no shore signs and no light of any kind. You are laying on you back and you feel no gravity with water of the temperature of your body. The water is still and you are content. Than two single waves come, let say 5 feet tall. One way come under you, lifted you up but sine you have no references of you weight and the position of your body then you do not feel that waves and it pass not registered by your senses. The second wave pass and you feel that what you at the very crest then you got a glimpse of the shore light. I mean that was some other event in your being while you body experienced the waves. The first wave reflects how my midbass horn sound. The second wave reflects how my ULF sound. Again the difference is very minute and I do not think will be notice by the most but I am not a common observer….

When I described the situation to a friend of my last night he advised that it very much might be due to the fact the my SS amp has much faster rise time then my DSETs and therefore the leading edge of my ULF wave is steeper then with the rest of my sound. We contemplated a few ides how it might be address but I come to an observation that I do not want to loops that sharpness of bass attack. Then the friend of mine proposed that it might be about the time alignment, again!

You see my ULF are time aligned with my midbass and the rest of the playback, so what he proposed is to move my ULF towers for a few inched back and forth in order to smear the very leading edge time aliment and by doing it to create a virtual equalization of rise time between my SS amp and Melquiades. I think that idea is very elegant and I very much look forward to try it. You need to understand that we are taking about moving a bass tower that is crossed at 25Hz with 3rd order for a few inches, or perhaps towing it in or out. Under normal circumstance if you move the tower for inch of two you shall not be notice any differents. However since now I know what exactly to listen then it might be very much that the different and the purpose of this experiment does exist. In fact I might predict that I will be able to moderate the ULF softness by doing what is proposed above what I do not know if adding the “softness” to ULF I will make my midbass to lose it’s edge – something that absolutely not willing to compromise.

Anyhow, it will be an interesting experiment.  If the smearing the ULF attach will help then, sine I have no 200W DSET amp I might introduce a 1:1 transformer after the SS amp, or use the SS specialist to decrease the amp rise time to equalize what my bass Milq does. If someone heard anybody who experimented with bass SS amps to behave as tube bass amps then let me know. It would be good if the issues I described to be cure by amplification and ULF location. It might be much more painful if it came from my ULF channel itself. I do not think that it is the case but it might…. Will see…

Rsg, 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
03-23-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
RF at Ona
Posts 12
Joined on 05-29-2007

Post #: 94
Post ID: 15829
Reply to: 15822
Drive ULF Amp from Midbass Amp Output
fiogf49gjkf0d

Romy,
I might have overlooked something on your site but I understand that your ULF amp is driven directly by the preamp line stage. If that is the case, you may want to consider an old technique for integrating subwoofers and drive your ULF amp with the attenuated output of the midbass amp. Perhaps this is an idea you considered and discarded but sometimes it helps to state the obvious.

Frequently with a deep bass speaker we want to bypass the low frequency limitations of the main amp and drive a separate bass amp directly from the pre-amp. But in your case, the midbass SET amp is optimized for the low bass so using it to drive the ULF solid-state amp might help restore some tonal system integration.

This technique should also help to improve the phase alignment of the ULF and midbass speakers since the ULF would see the phase variation of the midbass low-pass crossover and any phase variation from the SET amp/transformer. You may need to adjust the ULF/midbass crossover afterwards and pay attention to any phase inversion of the amps.

I hope people reading about your progress appreciate that a highly refined integration of your ULF and midbass sections is not a straightforward exercise. The midbass uses a transformer coupled tube amp, the ULF a direct coupled solid-state amp. The midbass is horn loaded, the ULF a direct radiator. They are positioned on opposite sides of the listener and their traveling waves moving in opposite directions. The pass bands are narrow allowing the primary high-pass phase/amplitude responses of the loudspeakers to mix with the responses of the crossover filters in unintended ways. Even if the ULF output is not supposed to overlap the midbass output I suspect it does so in practice - and of course the ULF distortion spectrum and resonances surely factor in the midbass if they are audible at all. And as I mentioned in an earlier post, there may be unwanted crosstalk effects between left and right channels because of close placement of the midbass horns. Be happy the results have been so pleasing and the only need is fine-tuning. Even from afar I have found this a provocative technical challenge.

---Robert

P.S.:  If you are going to reposition your ULF towers you might consider facing them away from the listener seat in an effort to reduce by redirection any higher frequency distortion or resonances that may have some (small) beaming to the front. The frequencies you want the towers to reproduce are very omnidirectional so there may be just a slight benefit to turning the towers around fully or even somewhat from the listener.

03-23-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 95
Post ID: 15831
Reply to: 15829
There is “something”…
fiogf49gjkf0d

 RF at Ona wrote:
Romy,
I might have overlooked something on your site but I understand that your ULF amp is driven directly by the preamp line stage. If that is the case, you may want to consider an old technique for integrating subwoofers and drive your ULF amp with the attenuated output of the midbass amp. Perhaps this is an idea you considered and discarded but sometimes it helps to state the obvious.

Frequently with a deep bass speaker we want to bypass the low frequency limitations of the main amp and drive a separate bass amp directly from the pre-amp. But in your case, the midbass SET amp is optimized for the low bass so using it to drive the ULF solid-state amp might help restore some tonal system integration.

This technique should also help to improve the phase alignment of the ULF and midbass speakers since the ULF would see the phase variation of the midbass low-pass crossover and any phase variation from the SET amp/transformer. You may need to adjust the ULF/midbass crossover afterwards and pay attention to any phase inversion of the amps.

Hm, interesting. I did not even think about the option to drive ULF from out of the midbass amp, partially because my midbass channel is high-passed by Milq’s inner-stage capacitor at 20Hz. I tend to unload unused bass from the midbass horn in order to prevent the unnecessary excursion of the driver that do not lead to bass able to go out of mouth. I know, it is not what people do – people load as much bass to midbass horns trying to get “more”. A horn is a delicate devise and if not blow into a horn more than it might handle then it handles what it can handle with more grace.

I am not sure that the minor problems I observe are in the realm of “restore some tonal system integration”. You see, the ULF does not output anything that resembles tone. The third order at 25Hz is not “sounds” but rather some LF bumps on the road. So, I might be mistaken but I do not think that I deal with tone but rather with shaping the sharpness of the bumps.

If I use midbass with no highpass then considering that I have monster LF out transformer in there I might be a good idea to have some kind powerful current SS buffer and to drive ULF from there. It is not how my playback organized however. In my playback the midbass channel drives midbass horn with line level, inner-state level and speaker level filter. The ULF power amp source signals from preamp via a line level filter of third order. Since the current at line level is relatively low and the shunting capacitance in my RCRCRC 25Hz low-pass filter before ULF amps is relatively high the ULF filter is “slow” itself. This slowness of ULF file compensates the advantage of the super fast rise time that my ULF power amp has over my tube Melquiades. My ULF power ams is Yamaha B2, that is full DC amp with no capacitance in signal and high current. Those amps have very fast rise time and if I use it directly then I would probably shunt the am with come capacitance to keep it in rise time in the same par as my Milq has. The harmonic difference between my SS ULF amp and Milq is totally different subject however but I hope that at sub 25Hz the harmonic differences might be not so prominent… I hope….

Actually the idea that I feel very enthusiastic is to use the same type of 1:1 output transformer that I use for my midbass but only the SS amps and my ULF section, I mean literally to bring the high current SS output signal to the transformer code. Do not forget that at sub 25Hz all coupling is coming via core. Furthermore, since the amp is DC amp (the preamp is also DC preamp) I might put some gap into the 1:1 transformer to deal with DC. I am not sure that the problems I hear are not DC related. I have drove my bass with DC amplification. Before Milq I drive my bass with a dedicated Lamm ML2 what was a SET with output transformer…  So, I am very interested to try the transformer approach but I am just too cheap to commission people to have those transformers to made just for sake of experiment. If I have borrow such a transformer and make experiments without paying around $1K then it would be more sensible solution. Does anybody have a 350H-400H, 250W-300W, 1.25:1 transformer with 100-150mH gap that I can borrow for a week or two? Preferable for me do not pay $1000 for the shipping of that thing…

 RF at Ona wrote:
I hope people reading about your progress appreciate that a highly refined integration of your ULF and midbass sections is not a straightforward exercise. The midbass uses a transformer coupled tube amp, the ULF a direct coupled solid-state amp. The midbass is horn loaded, the ULF a direct radiator. They are positioned on opposite sides of the listener and their traveling waves moving in opposite directions. The pass bands are narrow allowing the primary high-pass phase/amplitude responses of the loudspeakers to mix with the responses of the crossover filters in unintended ways. Even if the ULF output is not supposed to overlap the midbass output I suspect it does so in practice - and of course the ULF distortion spectrum and resonances surely factor in the midbass if they are audible at all. And as I mentioned in an earlier post, there may be unwanted crosstalk effects between left and right channels because of close placement of the midbass horns. Be happy the results have been so pleasing and the only need is fine-tuning. Even from afar I have found this a provocative technical challenge.

Yes, what you describe is sound like what it is it but in reality it is not, well, not all of it. The “behind” positioning of midbass horn, the biggest problem that I was afraid is turned out to be not a problem at all. The key with operating of this horn was to find a VERY precise balance between the out of midbass and upperbass. I have locked it with less than ¼ db precession (ask me how and you will be laughing) and believe me or not it stop to be a subject of my concern. Even without running ULF the midbass does not call to itself, it’s location and it’s output are very fine in my estimation and I have no needs to do anytime with it. The incorporation of ULF of different topology and driver by different amp is of cause a task but frankly as I dumped my ULF channels where they are now then I got right the way a VERY serious integrated bass. BTW, it is not a reference of any kind for me but since then I had a few of audio people in my room and no one reported any dissatisfaction with bass integration. So, with all complexity of my playback it is happens that it is not so complex to manage the things. still, in contrary to the people who visited me I do feel that there is “something” in my ULF that is not the way how I would like it to be. it is very minor and it is more like harmonic or dynamic differences but I do not think that it is harmonic or dynamic. I still am trying to figure out what it is….

 RF at Ona wrote:
P.S.:  If you are going to reposition your ULF towers you might consider facing them away from the listener seat in an effort to reduce by redirection any higher frequency distortion or resonances that may have some (small) beaming to the front. The frequencies you want the towers to reproduce are very omnidirectional so there may be just a slight benefit to turning the towers around fully or even somewhat from the listener.

I did have some VERY interesting and very surprising results last night while I was moving my ULF but I had very limited time to do it and to think about it. as I will do it again I will report the results.

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
03-24-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 96
Post ID: 15836
Reply to: 15831
I do not know what I deal with.
fiogf49gjkf0d

Last night I spent some time with observing my ULF and I conclude that I am not exactly know what I deal with. Do not get me wrong: the ULF forks fine, sounds fine and the playback is perfectly operational and listenable; it does sound very good right along with ULF integrated. I have no problem to leave it in the very same state as it is now as in my view it is perfectly acceptable result.

However, this fine ULF result is not what I would like to have ULTIMATELY. Ultimately I would like to have much more output at 10-15Hz region but to have nothing extra at 30Hz. I feel that my midbass horn produce very right sound at it very low end. The way how the midbass horn’ lowest notes are dissipating in thin air is fantastic, conforms to the best of my dreams.  They might use more “room” and more “weight” but this sense of “space” and “weight” I feel need to be a bit less generic then what I get. The ULF produces very good room/weight/space trick but it is a bit the same trick type for all music. If to think about then the playback has some kind of coloration at ULF level. Still, shutting down the Melquiades amplifiers and run just ULF channels it is clearly visible that there is no tone coming out of ULF, there is no “sound” out of them that has any tonal characteristics.

As I said, I do not know where this differences minimizing common denominator of ULF coming from. It might be from amplification, might be from the design of my woofer towers, it might me from the exercise level of my ULF output or from other things. It “feels” like my ULF need to be “softer” or to have more “good honk”. I do not know how to do it at this point. Ironically the moving the woofer towers do change the way how the sound. Believe me or not  but the move them for 5-6 inches do change the roundness of the ULF – if to know what to listen then it is auditable. However, this roundness looks like not what I looking. I am looking for a right balance between the speed bump and the stiffness of suspension. I would know what kind feeling I would like to get from that car passing the speed bump but I do not know what kind mechanism I can regulate in order to get this feeling.

My sentiment is that I might need to start from beginning and search for a new crossover point only now with the woofers towers to be positioned where they are now – right next to Macondo in time-aligned position as they use ot be in my old listening room. I keep driving my ULF less and less and not I am at 25dB up compare to what I was at my first day of the woofer towers in the new position. I do have more proper bass weight but I am not getting enough my ULF stimulation at sub-auditable region. I think to have it done properly I would mend two ULF channels – one for infra bass region that is still auditable in midbass and one for 8-15Hz region that has no impact to sounds but rather impact the “miracle” properly of  the room. Sure I will not have two ULF channels but I might experiment with transition sloe of my low filter at my current ULF in order to put one ass on two chairs.

So, the idea is to have more ULF in sun 15Hz region, much more, let say 15dB-20dB more then what I have now. Then to arrive to 25-30 Hz at the same level as I have now, perhaps even 1-2dB more shallow. Do not have any tonal or dymick colorations or any “events” as my midbass are decayed.  That all might be implemented by use of very sharp filter of let say 4-6 order and sliding my ULF down to frequency range at the transition slope. If I put let say 4th order at 10Hz then I might get somewhere but it would give me -48dB at the bottom of midbass horn. To the midbass to “see” my ULF I would need to push a LOT of gains and power into ULF – I just do not have this power in my ULF amplification. Even if I did then I might get just right ULF-LF-midbass balance in my room but it would not say anything about the “character” of bass sound I will get. With pumping 500W-700W into my woofer towers at 10Hz I will be dealing with very different driver reaction and I will be bounded to very limited amplification capacity – in a way will become a slave of it. Interesting the in my current seeming, even while my ULF reproduce sound that I characterize as “colored” the drivers in my woofer towers are practically motionless…

Anyhow, I think I need to rethink that whole thing. I am in a good shape to go for something offensive or as I call objectionable (in my language it means “full of loaded objectives”). What I have is good and it gives me time and room for maneuver for something what would be better than good, let see what it will bring me, at this point I am not sure that know what I deal with.

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
04-04-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 97
Post ID: 15930
Reply to: 14457
I want my ULF amp back.
fiogf49gjkf0d
I was trying to fix my broken B2 amp and I think I “fixed” it to the point that it is absolutely dead. That made me very upset.

It is kind of funny as playback sounds fine without ULF channel and I frequently listen with ULF channels off.   However, the burring of the ULF amps made me to be obsessed with a need to use ULF. So, the moral of this story is following:  Macondo “sounds” better with ULF channel turned intentionally off then with non-functional ULF channels. I can see in it a nice PDH destination in the fields of psychotic neuroses and if somebody is looking to advance own medical stature than I can lend myself to study. Still, I want my ULF channels back.

I felt so big itch today to get my ULF working and I almost bought today some kind of pro 1kW amp just to make my ULF running.  That would be a great time to have a powerful tube amp to try…

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
04-05-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 98
Post ID: 15931
Reply to: 15930
ULF emergency: Big & nasty solutions
fiogf49gjkf0d
Two "temporary" solutions worth considering:

1) A big nasty Krell KAV 500i (stereo 2x250 into 8 Ohms; 2x500w into 4 Ohms; built-in preamp; excellent volume potentiometer; remote; holds resale value). Though the mid range and HF of Krell amps is not compatible with your objectives, they might be perfect for ULF duty.
http://stlouis.craigslist.org/ele/2274083128.html

2) A pair of big nasty subwoofer plate amps (link below show new rack-mountable format).
http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?Partnumber=300-811

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
04-05-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 99
Post ID: 15932
Reply to: 15931
No-amplification time
fiogf49gjkf0d
I do not want go for emergency ULF amps and to pay more than $50 for it, in fact all plate amps shall cost $50. I will probably end up getting another B2 amp, identical to the one that blew up with the identical changes. I just felt that this no-amplification times a good opportunity to see where I stay on the powerful SS amps. The powerful SS amps all sound very different in bass and it might be a good time to try something different, to get some reference of what is possible out there. I even thought to get my extra pair of monster LF transformers, attach it to a full-range Milq that I have and to try it on my bass towers. Sure with 20W it will not go very far but at low volume it might be worth to try. I have some kind of another 60W tube PP amp that a local audio guy left in my home but it will not be LF DEST and most likely it naturally roll of at 20Hz.

The problem with testing of the tube amps and ULF is that loading become very important and with wrong loading all bets are off. To set a tube amps for a proper symmetrical clipping at maximum power into the given load is not so hard but it is a processes itself – I would go over it is it was 100W tube DSET that I would keep but I do not weans to go over it with a temporary amp.  I might borrow some amps from local dealers but I do not have the local dealers with whom I have established relations. I use to have but they are gone to different fields. To borrow from dealers I do not know the amps that I have no intention to buy - I do not feel comfortable to do it.

I might rent some pro audio SS powerful amps. It might cost some little money but it will be no stench of hi-fi retailer. Again, how nice would be to have a local technician: I have full-assemble Zarathustra II amp that Dima built for me and all part for very expensive PS.  For half day a technician would put everything together, I would like the person to work in my lab and use my test equipment – I will juts pay for his time.  Would it be so great – to write a check, to get home and to have a fully working Zarathustra II, over 200W in class A is sitting in my home. I need to do it sometimes myself but I would REALLY would like to outsource all those tasks. It might be a good dig for right person…

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
04-06-2011 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 100
Post ID: 15937
Reply to: 14457
Listening audio without ULF.
fiogf49gjkf0d

You know, it surprises me how much less fan to listen my playback without ULF.  Nope, the playback does not sound bad from audio perspective without ULF but it for sure a bit different experience. From a certain perspective to be in a room with ULF on is a different experience as ULF charnel adds some extra softness to the room. The Midbass in fact adds softness to the room but ULF adds to this softness some very fine touch “softness elegance”. The note’s decay dies more gracefully and more acoustically soft of speaking…

I do think that ULF channels has to be a part of any more or less serious playback and I think that  any more or less serious playback shall explode what is going on udder 20Hz. As I said my own ULF is in a bit compromise as it goes too high – up to 27 Hz. What I fix or buy a new power amp for ULF I will try to slide my ULF lower, let say down to 15Hz and add gain, effectively sliding the ULF down in the transition slope. I do not know where would be right balance between my sub 20Hz ULF mishigas and proper balanced auditable sound but I am sure that what I get there then I will be able to recognize it. I do not mind to experiment with ULF equalization as I think it might also bring some interesting benefits.

The whole point is that ULF has become an organic part of my listening environment and now with no ULF power amp even the playback sounds fine but the environment feels underdeveloped. I think more people have to hear the contribution of any more or less properly implemented ULF to understand what I am taking about.

Interesting that industry do produce ULF-targeted devises but they looks like do not meet a wide popularity. Wilson Audio for instance did XS subwoofers. They were unfortunately ported with two Aura 1808 drivers

http://www.soundstage.com/revequip/wilson_xs_sub.htm

…and meant to be use under the Wilson Grand Slamms. You can say anything you want about the Grand Slamm bass, I am not a huge fun of it either but Wilson for sure had a point advocating to use ULF channels to supplement the Grand Slamms bass. You will not see the idiots-reviewers feeling that their Grand Slamms, Alexandrias and the farty Maxxes need any ULF support.   The Morons are just not familiar with the whole ULF subject but by the fact that Wilson made XS modules available it clearly indicate that David Wilson is familiar. The late John Dunlavy before he bailed out from his active involvement in audio did produce set large ULF modules. John told me that his SC-VI speakers that were considered goog bass performers still might be benefited by an addition of ULF channels.

I very much do not use Dunlavy or Wilson as some kind of reference or examples as they have this own sinister reasons to do what they did. Still.  I just merely point out that those options are available out there as much as it might be some other solution that can effectively to work below auditable LF region. I do encourage you if you have opportunity to audition an installation with ULF idea engaged. You might get that ULF bug and will find the no-ULF installations being too plain for your new taste.

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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