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12-17-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
noviygera


Chicago, IL
Posts 177
Joined on 06-12-2009

Post #: 51
Post ID: 22306
Reply to: 20632
Well, it looks like I am again back to working on midbass channel.
fiogf49gjkf0d
Besides hornresp modeling, is there things to think about when starting design and build of midbass channel from scratch? The range I need is 60 to 300 hz. It will be used with 6db/octave crossover. It will be located under my midrange horn -- the mouth of midbass. It can be folded or curved. Please help me with questions to formulate and I can provide answers. Maybe this will be a good start to formulate the design.Thanks!

12-17-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 52
Post ID: 22307
Reply to: 22306
I do not think so.
fiogf49gjkf0d
Generally,  I do not think it is possible to put 60Hz horn under MF channel. You have a limited highs of MF and you need to put 60Hz under it. You have no room for circular horn and you have to go rectangular, mach wider then you want it to be. Then the length hit you. Chose your profile and calculate in your hornresp the length of the horn- it will be too long to be able to time align with MF. Sure you can male the 60Hz horn with very large throat and put the MF all the way back but it will be not truly a horn but a direct radiator. There are many other reasons why I would not put any 60Hz along with the rest horns. Anyhow, if you need 60-300 horn then try to do it as a separate device, not integrated with your horns but integrated with your room, also do not think what kind crossover it will/should have - you are too far from this thinking. Again, generally I do not like idea of integrated 60-300 horns and I consider them a design mistake. It does not mean that you shall not build it , however. Perhaps if you describe the rest of your system/objectives then I will see where the proposed horn might fit.

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
12-17-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
noviygera


Chicago, IL
Posts 177
Joined on 06-12-2009

Post #: 53
Post ID: 22311
Reply to: 22307
TWO issues may have been addressed.
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy, I have somewhat different possibilities than you are seeing. My system is physically higher than most because my listening position is at standing height or sitting in a high stool. I have used this litening height for a few years and grew to appreciate for a number of reasons (worth separate discussion). One of which is increased space under the midrange horn and less interaction from floor.  So I gain about 20" of height below mid. In fact I measure easy 46" from floor to mid horn edge. Another contraversial thing I use is DSP crossover. It is not perfect but I have DELAY in my arsenal! So I can use full length horn. This, at least covers TWO of your rightly noted concerns. Does this open options to continue discussion further? If so I am happy to further formulate my requirements. 1. Gracefully integration with midrange horn at 250-300hz with 6db/oct crossover and absolutely no allowed EQ. 2. Staright rectangular or five sided vs folded: this is something I do not know.
12-18-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 54
Post ID: 22314
Reply to: 22311
Extra 20" will do.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 noviygera wrote:
Romy, I have somewhat different possibilities than you are seeing. My system is physically higher than most because my listening position is at standing height or sitting in a high stool. I have used this litening height for a few years and grew to appreciate for a number of reasons (worth separate discussion). One of which is increased space under the midrange horn and less interaction from floor.  So I gain about 20" of height below mid. In fact I measure easy 46" from floor to mid horn edge. Another contraversial thing I use is DSP crossover. It is not perfect but I have DELAY in my arsenal! So I can use full length horn. This, at least covers TWO of your rightly noted concerns. Does this open options to continue discussion further? If so I am happy to further formulate my requirements. 1. Gracefully integration with midrange horn at 250-300hz with 6db/oct crossover and absolutely no allowed EQ. 2. Staright rectangular or five sided vs folded: this is something I do not know.
   
Sure, if you have your listening position 20" higher then this is absolutely different story that changes everything. With extra 20" you shall be able to put your 60hz horn  under your MF with no problems. Also, if you insist to use the DSP crossover then the time alignment become no problem. Certainly it would not be something that I endorse but my approval should not be your design criteria. I am a little concern why you insist on 6dB crossover with no EQ.  "No EQ" is fine demand but usually no one EQ horns explicitly. That will be your personal playback and if you do not want to EQ it then juts do not do it. What I mean that "NO EQ" is not a design objective. Abut the 6dB crossover - that what I disagree. Of cause it would be great to have 6dB crossover BUT it is VERY and complitly not necessary to do have as a design objective if you do not have characteristics of horn and driver in your head. You might choose a driver that shoot all the way to 6-7khz with large horn throat and you will never kill the channel output with 6dB crossover. Anyhow, I think you need to start with throat size. Knowing the throat  and measuring the size of the space you have under MF channel you will get the horn length and the horn rate (presumably it will be 60Hz). Then you need to start modeling how your system will look like. The shape of the horn and folds is complitly up to you. There are many slippery slopes with any of the approaches but it it possible to deal with all of them. 
 
I think the biggest problem that people like you will face (I mean people who are in design phase of Midbass horn) is that they do not know what throat  they need to target as they do not know what driver they will be using. In reality the driver is the key. You can buy zillion of them, found the one that you love but no one knows how this driver will sound in your horn. So, you can't pick driver withe have horn built and you can't design a horn until you know your throat  size that is dictated by your driver. That is the main bitch of the midbass horns. So, what we all do is building some kind of approximation that can be move to one or to another direction. The best solution that I found and that  always recommend is to implement a joint 2" away from throat  and make the driver part of the horn along with the final throat  size removable. 
 
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
12-19-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
noviygera


Chicago, IL
Posts 177
Joined on 06-12-2009

Post #: 55
Post ID: 22315
Reply to: 22314
The Driver
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy,I am in agreement with your observations. I am not certain I will end up using specific crossover slope, like 6db or whatever. It's what I prefer in my current setup. I will try to have make a design that will work with this type of crossover -- one that will roll off naturally below 60hz and above 300hz. In this case 6db crossovers will be a good match. I understand that this will be the result of interaction of driver and horn. So lets say it will depend... Now would be a good time to narrow down on actual driver and revisit above points again later.
Also you say: "In reality the driver is the key"So let me ask for advice on suitable driver(s). This be my next step. Need I select a size? Or driver with certain spec? For example lets say driver "x" is good for this range and has been tried and proven. What is your recommendation on driver for this range? Or better way to look at this, HOW do you recommend to select the driver? For example, you use Fane Studio 8 in a different range with different horn but maybe this driver will also work in my application? No? ok, but what qualifies the driver? Or is it purely coincidental match? Is it the case that all 400watt treated paper pro drivers should not be even considered, etc.

12-19-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 56
Post ID: 22316
Reply to: 22315
The Last driver is never a first one.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 noviygera wrote:
Also you say: "In reality the driver is the key"So let me ask for advice on suitable driver(s). This be my next step. Need I select a size? Or driver with certain spec? For example lets say driver "x" is good for this range and has been tried and proven. What is your recommendation on driver for this range? Or better way to look at this, HOW do you recommend to select the driver? For example, you use Fane Studio 8 in a different range with different horn but maybe this driver will also work in my application? No? ok, but what qualifies the driver? Or is it purely coincidental match? Is it the case that all 400watt treated paper pro drivers should not be even considered, etc.
noviygera, they are all good questions, I wish I were able to answer them definitively. The reality is that you never truly know how a specific driver will sound in a specific horn. It would be nice to have a compression driver but I do not think you will find a lot of them that can accommodate 60Hz. There are a few Japanese-made but I do not know how they work. They are also too expensive to buy them juts to experiment with them. If you look at direct radiators to be used as compression driver then discard T/S. Look for highest sensitivity at lower diameter, lowest exertion and lower cone mass, lowest power handling. Look at open air resonance frequency around 40-50Hz. it is very hard to find a driver like this and even if you do then it does not mean that that it work out for you. In my view you need to take one single driver that you like and to make that driver to work it's best in context of your horn. If you do so then you will learn the whole horn/driver interface and then you will be able to do whatever you want. 
 
The best direction that I would recommend would be to get some new production of whatever you want that fit the criteria and to make a horn that works with this new production driver. Then you can look into the realm of good vintage drivers. Some of the vintage drivers are much more interesting in trim of dynamic and tone but the vintage drivers will have own problems that you will need to be equipped to deal with. Anyhow, at this point look for a driver and do not worry that it will not be a "last driver".

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
12-21-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
noviygera


Chicago, IL
Posts 177
Joined on 06-12-2009

Post #: 57
Post ID: 22332
Reply to: 22316
Driver size
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy,
You provided very good starting points on the driver selection and I am also corresponding with a gentleman that may help me with actual horn design. I have found a couple of drivers that seem to work based on your guidelines. They are pro sound 10" to 12" with Fs around 50-55hz. Is it the case that driver size should be no more than certain diameter to sound decent in 60 to 300hz range? Such as, 15" being too large I need to look at no more than 12"? It looks like current hifi drivers are out question and anything remotely suitable is going to be PA.
Thanks.
ps. Correction: I just noticed that Fostex 8" full range drivers meet those specs and have very low power handling (maybe too low).
12-22-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 58
Post ID: 22333
Reply to: 22332
Some words of warning.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 noviygera wrote:
You provided very good starting points on the driver selection and I am also corresponding with a gentleman that may help me with actual horn design. I have found a couple of drivers that seem to work based on your guidelines. They are pro sound 10" to 12" with Fs around 50-55hz. Is it the case that driver size should be no more than certain diameter to sound decent in 60 to 300hz range? Such as, 15" being too large I need to look at no more than 12"? It looks like current hifi drivers are out question and anything remotely suitable is going to be PA.
ps. Correction: I just noticed that Fostex 8" full range drivers meet those specs and have very low power handling (maybe too low).

Noviygera, If I was targeting 60Horn then I would be looking for something as you said: Fs around 50-55hz, with 10-12” driver and probably 7-8” throat. I do not know about Fostex 8", I never used them. To have a good 8” driver and load it into let say 5-7” would be wonderful.  I just do not know if Fostex 8", being a “full-range” will have stiff enough code to be used as a compression driver. That all need to be your experiments. Do not forget to use in vintage JBL drivers, some of them are very dood.
 
I would like you also clearly understand that doing what you planning to do you will be out of “save zone”. I do understand that 20” of additional height do give to you a wondeful opportunely to kill with one channel both upper bass and midbass regions. As I told you there are many problems with this approaches. I did name juts two and you did have good justifiable reasons to neglect it. There are more to it and I would like to share with you as it very much might bite you by your foot in future. My idea to split channels across mid and upper basses did not derive from thin air but it descended from dealing with reality and practicality of real installations.  The 80-120Hz regions is VERY problematic in the average rooms we use for listening. In my view it is virtual impossible to have more or less even response from a channel that runs 60-300Hz and that is size of 2-6 refrigerators. You might get a response with huge drops or peaks at each channels but you will be unbelievably lucky if you do. Most of the time it is MUCH more manageable if you have a channel split in the mid of the “dangers zone” when you can with crossovers, positioning and many other ways to make a right fit into the acoustics of your room. Also, I kind of recognize that the above 80s horns are speaker’s channels and they comply with esthetics of the rest of the horns. The sub 80s horns are rather room’s channels and they are not part of your playback but rather a part of the room décor. There are others censers that I would express. For instance do you really want 60Hz shooting at your face? I feel that any horns under 80hz should not s
 
Anyhow, I do it is a noble task to integrate everything into one 60-300Hz channels but you do need to understand that if you during do it will have some acoustic integration problems then by the venture of the size of your channels you won’t be able to do anything.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-22-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
noviygera


Chicago, IL
Posts 177
Joined on 06-12-2009

Post #: 59
Post ID: 22337
Reply to: 22333
I think you are right.
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy,
You make very, very good points now I am re-evaluating this all-in-one horn concept. I do know one thing that I learned from my current system. Midbass horn that rolls off below 120 hz and integrated with sub is not good. I have struggled with this format for 2 years with no successful solution and this led me to explore a more expanded midbass channel. The transition from 120hz horn to direct radiator subs is not possible to be seamless without significant loss of focused sound. Some may like this "artificial fuzziness region" but to me it is better to push it down in the frequency range. However, I think you are correct. It may be that true 80hz midbass will be perfectly good and in a different league compared to 120hz. I think what made me look past this 80hz was my bad experience with 80hz straight Edgar horn that I had. But now I will take your advice and curb my excitement with the 60hz "brute force" approach. I will think carefully about something like 70-80hz solution. Very good points and I thank you again.
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 60
Post ID: 22338
Reply to: 22337
Everything is possible if done properly.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 noviygera wrote:
Romy,
You make very, very good points now I am re-evaluating this all-in-one horn concept. I do know one thing that I learned from my current system. Midbass horn that rolls off below 120 hz and integrated with sub is not good. I have struggled with this format for 2 years with no successful solution and this led me to explore a more expanded midbass channel. The transition from 120hz horn to direct radiator subs is not possible to be seamless without significant loss of focused sound.

Noviygera, I do not know what you do and what you current acoustic system is. If you do have extra 20” of high then to go for midbass solution sound reasonable. What kind of midbass would it be and how low it makes send to do it another subject. If I have the picture of your current horns and know what would meet the midbass atop them we could strategize something together. What I very much disagree is that integration of upper bass horns with direct radiators at the bottom is VERY much possible with spectacular result if the things done properly.



"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Scott L
Posts 17
Joined on 02-26-2008

Post #: 61
Post ID: 22339
Reply to: 22338
Many aspects combine, or they don't.
fiogf49gjkf0d
IMO  A 60Hz attempt is too low and a 120Hz attempt too high. This is a difficult task, that of properly integrating horn loaded mid-bass with
D.R subs.

What type and slope crossover are you using ?
I'm hoping you are going active here ?

How much air can your sub woofer section move ?
You simply MUST be able to move prodigious amounts of air at the very low frequencies.

Keep in mind, that in order for these two to integrate, you must maintain a linear range of response, to at LEAST, an octave past either side of
the crossover point. And that, is almost impossible with a horn loaded mid-bass. The key word being "almost" but not impossible.

It's very difficult. To use, say, a 100Hz x-over point, your mid bass horn should reach an F3 somewhere close to 50Hz, and your subs should be linear
to 200Hz. Most subs BEG to rise in response as frequency ascends. Ideally, this is dealt with in the design, but a last ditch effort would be to add
EQ. after the crossover.

Yes, please do show pictures !
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 62
Post ID: 22340
Reply to: 22332
Exponential horn Calculator
fiogf49gjkf0d
Actually you do not need anybody to “design” an upper bass horns for you. This page is all that you need. You need to make the Java-crap to be able to run.   

http://rocketsciencecanada.com/Sound/Horns/Tool_ExponentialCalculator.asp

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
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 63
Post ID: 22341
Reply to: 22339
Forget word "subwoofer".
fiogf49gjkf0d

 Scott L wrote:
IMO  A 60Hz attempt is too low and a 120Hz attempt too high. This is a difficult task, that of properly integrating horn loaded mid-bass with
D.R subs.

What type and slope crossover are you using ?
I'm hoping you are going active here ?

How much air can your sub woofer section move ?
You simply MUST be able to move prodigious amounts of air at the very low frequencies.

Keep in mind, that in order for these two to integrate, you must maintain a linear range of response, to at LEAST, an octave past either side of
the crossover point. And that, is almost impossible with a horn loaded mid-bass. The key word being "almost" but not impossible.

It's very difficult. To use, say, a 100Hz x-over point, your mid bass horn should reach an F3 somewhere close to 50Hz, and your subs should be linear
to 200Hz. Most subs BEG to rise in response as frequency ascends. Ideally, this is dealt with in the design, but a last ditch effort would be to add
EQ. after the crossover.

Yes, please do show pictures !

Scott, I think you a bit overly complicate the task of integration of mid/upper bass with LF. The key mistake you make (in my view) is semantic. You call LF section as subwoofer that immediately bring in imagination an industry boom box sitting in a corner trying to fill the room with lower octaves. Yes, the integration of those type solutions is very complicated and in my mind it still never work properly. Subwoofers work OK with a pair of mini-monitors and total cost of $500. If you went to extend to build multichannel time-aligned horn installation then you are way out of subwoofers rhetoric and you need to talk/thin about a truly potent LF acoustic system. I personally feel that line-arrays with cylindrical waves, good drivers and long walls work spectacularly well with horns and they are very easy to integrate. So, it is all about a proper chose of topology. Whatever it might be it must not be subwoofers. Subwoofers as a category is consumer-level audio element and the concept should not be used along withany  high-endish objectives.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Scott L
Posts 17
Joined on 02-26-2008

Post #: 64
Post ID: 22342
Reply to: 22341
Substitute words
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:

 Scott L wrote:
IMO  A 60Hz attempt is too low and a 120Hz attempt too high. This is a difficult task, that of properly integrating horn loaded mid-bass with
D.R subs.

What type and slope crossover are you using ?
I'm hoping you are going active here ?

How much air can your sub woofer section move ?
You simply MUST be able to move prodigious amounts of air at the very low frequencies.

Keep in mind, that in order for these two to integrate, you must maintain a linear range of response, to at LEAST, an octave past either side of
the crossover point. And that, is almost impossible with a horn loaded mid-bass. The key word being "almost" but not impossible.

It's very difficult. To use, say, a 100Hz x-over point, your mid bass horn should reach an F3 somewhere close to 50Hz, and your subs should be linear
to 200Hz. Most subs BEG to rise in response as frequency ascends. Ideally, this is dealt with in the design, but a last ditch effort would be to add
EQ. after the crossover.

Yes, please do show pictures !

Scott, I think you a bit overly complicate the task of integration of mid/upper bass with LF. The key mistake you make (in my view) is semantic. You call LF section as subwoofer that immediately bring in imagination an industry boom box sitting in a corner trying to fill the room with lower octaves. Yes, the integration of those type solutions is very complicated and in my mind it still never work properly. Subwoofers work OK with a pair of mini-monitors and total cost of $500. If you went to extend to build multichannel time-aligned horn installation then you are way out of subwoofers rhetoric and you need to talk/thin about a truly potent LF acoustic system. I personally feel that line-arrays with cylindrical waves, good drivers and long walls work spectacularly well with horns and they are very easy to integrate. So, it is all about a proper chose of topology. Whatever it might be it must not be subwoofers. Subwoofers as a category is consumer-level audio element and the concept should not be used along withany  high-endish objectives.
A

Ahh, great point !   Okay, please substitute the phrase "low frequency section" for every place that I incorrectly used the word: sub(s)
Then, every thing else I posted is still true. To wit, the last time I checked, you were using 6each @ 10 inch low frequency drivers per side.
That's "getting there" but still not enough to produce an acoustical watt. (which horns CAN do).
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 65
Post ID: 22343
Reply to: 22342
I am not sure what you mean.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Scott L wrote:
 the last time I checked, you were using 6each @ 10 inch low frequency drivers per side. That's "getting there" but still not enough to produce an acoustical watt. (which horns CAN do).
   
I am not sure what you mean. At the times when I used 6 driver line-arrays for sub 100Hz region it was integrated with 115Hz upper bass horn and I assure you that both integration and overall sound were very fine. I do not think that it would work in larger or non-sealed room however but it worked very well in there, I think it was ~300 sq feet. So, I do not know what you mean saying “not enough to produce an acoustical watt”.  In that room ANY design of midbass horn would be a disasters. 


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Gargoyle
Posts 69
Joined on 02-01-2015

Post #: 66
Post ID: 22344
Reply to: 22343
If I may
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
 Scott L wrote:
 the last time I checked, you were using 6each @ 10 inch low frequency drivers per side. That's "getting there" but still not enough to produce an acoustical watt. (which horns CAN do).
   
I am not sure what you mean. At the times when I used 6 driver line-arrays for sub 100Hz region it was integrated with 115Hz upper bass horn and I assure you that both integration and overall sound were very fine. I do not think that it would work in larger or non-sealed room however but it worked very well in there, I think it was ~300 sq feet. So, I do not know what you mean saying “not enough to produce an acoustical watt”.  In that room ANY design of midbass horn would be a disasters. 


My guess is was referring to the pressure levels at the surface of the woofer(s) compared to that of a horn. The sound pressure of a direct radiator has to be much high to achieve a certain SPL at the same distance of a lower pressure horn.

It is a phrase more commonly used in pro-sound circles. Typical direct radiator types are only capable of producing ~3 acoustical watts for every 100 electrical watts input.

One acoustical watt is ~107 db from an OMNIdirectional source.

I haven't done them math to see how your array compares, but I can surmise that Scott is suggesting that your particular implementation in that room was not up to the task of orchestra, which is considered to be ~1 acoustic watt in power. Probably OK for rock though.
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Scott L
Posts 17
Joined on 02-26-2008

Post #: 67
Post ID: 22345
Reply to: 22344
Pretty darn close
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Gargoyle wrote:
 Romy the Cat wrote:
 Scott L wrote:
 the last time I checked, you were using 6each @ 10 inch low frequency drivers per side. That's "getting there" but still not enough to produce an acoustical watt. (which horns CAN do).
   
I am not sure what you mean. At the times when I used 6 driver line-arrays for sub 100Hz region it was integrated with 115Hz upper bass horn and I assure you that both integration and overall sound were very fine. I do not think that it would work in larger or non-sealed room however but it worked very well in there, I think it was ~300 sq feet. So, I do not know what you mean saying “not enough to produce an acoustical watt”.  In that room ANY design of midbass horn would be a disasters. 


My guess is was referring to the pressure levels at the surface of the woofer(s) compared to that of a horn. The sound pressure of a direct radiator has to be much high to achieve a certain SPL at the same distance of a lower pressure horn.

It is a phrase more commonly used in pro-sound circles. Typical direct radiator types are only capable of producing ~3 acoustical watts for every 100 electrical watts input.

One acoustical watt is ~107 db from an OMNIdirectional source.

I haven't done them math to see how your array compares, but I can surmise that Scott is suggesting that your particular implementation in that room was not up to the task of orchestra, which is considered to be ~1 acoustic watt in power. Probably OK for rock though.


Romy's bass driver array is actually a very good approach. 6 x10's per side is actually enough to produce an acoustical watt at the upper part of the range they cover, but not down to the subterranean depths of an orchestra's hall ambiance. I did not realize his former room in the basement apartment was as small as it evidently was. What about now, though ?    Actually, the point of my post was illustrate the acoustical needs for proper integration of the two types of systems. Also let me add here, I feel for domestic settings, this approach makes the most sense from a practical viewpoint.
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 68
Post ID: 22346
Reply to: 22344
I have no idea why acoustic watt is needed.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Gargoyle wrote:

My guess is was referring to the pressure levels at the surface of the woofer(s) compared to that of a horn. The sound pressure of a direct radiator has to be much high to achieve a certain SPL at the same distance of a lower pressure horn.

It is a phrase more commonly used in pro-sound circles. Typical direct radiator types are only capable of producing ~3 acoustical watts for every 100 electrical watts input.

One acoustical watt is ~107 db from an OMNIdirectional source.

I haven't done them math to see how your array compares, but I can surmise that Scott is suggesting that your particular implementation in that room was not up to the task of orchestra, which is considered to be ~1 acoustic watt in power. Probably OK for rock though.
Gargoyle, I am not familiar with this dimension: acoustic watt in power, neither have I been familiar how my playback sound “for rock”. The Wikipedia dives a definition of Sound Power or Acoustic Power. I understand what they say but I see not practical use of this measurement, at least for myself. I do not know what kind reasoning you used to convert the reportedly low Acoustic Power into disability of this or that playback to “play orchestra”.  I do not defend my playback – I am very comfortable what it did in that room and I very much insist that it was crème de la crème of all multichannel integrations (and I heard a LOT). Mind you that I did it with knowing what Acoustic Power is.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 69
Post ID: 22347
Reply to: 22345
Still confided.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Scott L wrote:
Romy's bass driver array is actually a very good approach. 6 x10's per side is actually enough to produce an acoustical watt at the upper part of the range they cover, but not down to the subterranean depths of an orchestra's hall ambiance. I did not realize his former room in the basement apartment was as small as it evidently was. What about now, though ?    Actually, the point of my post was illustrate the acoustical needs for proper integration of the two types of systems. Also let me add here, I feel for domestic settings, this approach makes the most sense from a practical viewpoint.

Scott, I still do not “get” what acoustical watt is. To me it is absolutely bogus parameter. Let presume that acoustic system is abstractedly and anechoicly linear from 200 to 20hz and has some kind of reference ability to produce an acoustic pressure to a reference distance driven by 1W or electrical power. Being placed in a real room the acoustic system will be exposed to all room modes (standing waves) but let discard it.  Another factor that will be effected the real response would be the ability of room to dissipate different frequency. It might for instance produce 90dB at 8 feet and 1W and 100Hz but 70dB at 8 feet and 1W and 40Hz (we discard standing waves juts for sake of conversation). So, in this case we have a basic frequency response as an inverted characteristic of room ability to dissipate different frequency. My question is: why in this picture the concept of Acoustic Power or Acoustical Watt can advance anything? I am not being sarcastic, I just truly do not know where to use it.
 


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Gargoyle
Posts 69
Joined on 02-01-2015

Post #: 70
Post ID: 22348
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I will clarify
fiogf49gjkf0d
The "sound power" for a rock concert is 0.1W (~110db),  lower then the 1W (120db) cited for Symphony orchestras.

If ones goal is to "reproduce" symphony in all it's glory, one should aim for 1 acoustical watt at the listening position, or at least as close as practically possible.

That is what I meant by saying it was probably "OK for rock" from a technical reproduction sense, not subjectively.
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Gargoyle
Posts 69
Joined on 02-01-2015

Post #: 71
Post ID: 22349
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Explanation
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy wrote:
My question is: why in this picture the concept of Acoustic Power or Acoustical Watt can advance anything? I am not being sarcastic, I just truly do not know where to use it.


Sorry, I'm not trying to answer for Scott, but think of it this way, the resistance of air is nonlinear, but the calculations of wattage is usually done in a linear fashion, 100 watt amp plus 100 watt amp is 200 watt.

It is a parameter that you can apply to anything that produces sound, the electrical wattage is almost arbitrary and system dependent.

Now as far as what frequency for orchestra etc, one can surmise that 1 acoustical watt was more or less full band of whatever song they were playing during the test.
Just as the 100 acoustical watts (140db) cited for a turboprop aircraft taking off would be a combination of the frequencies made by the engine.

An engineer could then figure out how much wattage he actually needs to reproduce a turboprop taking off, based off of the acoustic power and the efficiency of his speaker combinations.
He could then place this system on a runway and ideally from some distance it will sound the same as a real airplane, minus the motion.

12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 72
Post ID: 22350
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I am still not there.
fiogf49gjkf0d
So, Gargoyle, from what you says this concept of “acoustic watt” is used to predict the necessary power/gain of amplification needed for a drive an acoustic system in a given room. I feel that the acoustic wattage is very odd way to do it. BTW, the acoustical resistance of air is NOT nonlinear. For the same temperature, altitude and wave shape it is very linear. The dissipation of different frequencies in the space is nonlinear but it has nothing to do with resistance of air. The wattage calculations in high-end world is not usually what people do. People usually try to have more or less even frequency response across all bands and drive what they drive while observing if amp get to a critical operation. Sorry, I truly do not see a use of “acoustic watt” in any playback consideration. Well, this is just my take.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
12-23-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Gargoyle
Posts 69
Joined on 02-01-2015

Post #: 73
Post ID: 22351
Reply to: 22350
Say watt
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
So, Gargoyle, from what you says this concept of “acoustic watt” is used to predict the necessary power/gain of amplification needed for a drive an acoustic system in a given room. I feel that the acoustic wattage is very odd way to do it.


Almost, except the acoustic system is on the same side of the equation as the amplification. It's borderline semantics I know.
It is somewhat odd in the niche of HiFi, but in the broader sense it is practical because it is transportable to other things that do not have speakers.


 Romy the Cat wrote:
BTW, the acoustical resistance of air is NOT nonlinear.


A 100 horsepower car may do 100 MPH, but the same car with 200 horsepower cannot do 200 MPH.
It may take around 400 horsepower to reach 200 MPH. That is why I say the resistance is nonlinear.




12-24-2015 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
noviygera


Chicago, IL
Posts 177
Joined on 06-12-2009

Post #: 74
Post ID: 22353
Reply to: 22351
Left channel photo
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This is left channel. Right channel is mirror image.Noviygera_Lchannel.JPG
Noviygera_Lchannel2.JPG

I am using 6db active crossovers all around.The subs are pair of 18" Aurasound 1808 per side. The current midbass is the white color horn you see. It is Funktion One DS15.  The issue with this one is it designed to be used in PAIRS (sadly, as I discovered after purchasing). I tried it and having a pair stacked sounds a lot better (I can do easily by putting both midbass horns on one side and use a short stand). First of all, PAIRED, they play flat to 60hz in my room although with some ripples, not flat flat. Second, the sound is much more balanced and even sounding than single unit. This is one possible solution but it means I would have to buy another pair of these to have a quad and they are pricey.Second solution is what made me reconsider them in my system -- to build a proper single midbass from scratch.I can go in long detail about the rest of system but the main point is that the midrange horn plays ok to 200Hz although when measured, in reality begins to roll off slowly below 300hz. I have no issues with this it and it is fine sounding. The issue is how to best cover the range between 250 hz and subwoofer.
11-25-2021 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Retsel
Posts 2
Joined on 10-04-2008

Post #: 75
Post ID: 26562
Reply to: 22353
Another idea for midbass is a Karlson
This thread is old, but I thought that I would add my 2c....
I use a Karlson with EV15L speakers.  This fills the gap from 60 to 500 hz nicely.  The  Karlson is a 6th-order bandpass box, and while it has some resonances above the 2 octave range, the speaker is designed to reduce the effect of those resonances.  
Retsel
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