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  »  New  Macondo Horns: biography...  Macondo with Pussy Eyes....  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     2  61253  05-18-2005
  »  New  The “Primary Frequencies”...  Melody range and the other octaves...  Audio For Dummies ™  Forum     5  75992  09-08-2005
  »  New  The most promising “best” commercial speaker..  Munich High End 2023...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     192  1742418  12-06-2006
  »  New  Macondo's Axioms: Horn-loaded acoustic systems..  A link to another thread....  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     120  643192  07-29-2007
  »  New  Proximity of horn’s crossover and it’s ability to care ..  Does this explain or relate to the "trombone"...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     2  35873  09-16-2007
  »  New  60hz, GPA-515-8ghp horn.....  60hz horn...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     32  304077  07-01-2008
  »  New  Audio and the “Alzheimer’s triggers”..  Yet one more 'trigger' not mentioned......  Playback Listening  Forum     3  32241  08-12-2009
  »  New  Other Ways of getting Special Tone from a loudspeaker...  Paul S....  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     8  86886  11-27-2009
  »  New  The Evolution of Honk...  Horn-loading and compression had no direct relativity t...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     2  29212  06-06-2010
  »  New  Adding one more non-spherical to Macondo...  Horn suggestions for 300Hz-1000Hz channel...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     23  239876  12-15-2010
08-18-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 26
Post ID: 2759
Reply to: 2758
More mysteries and THE Honk.

I spend quite a few hours playing with the new channel trying to ingrate into Macondo but so far not successful.

Since the new channel and the Macondo upperbass horn have identical sensitively and identical impedance I figured that I would drive it from the same amplifier for a time being and now the new channel uses the same Super Melquiades upper bass amplifier and the upperbass horn. The crossovering is very elegant. The amplifier produces now from 50Hz to 800Hz, first order. The upperbass hors kicks-in with no filters at 100Hz and begin to roll off at 800Hz die to the amps roll off. The new channel is in parallel and sites behind one high-pass cap, picking up from ~600Hz -700Hz and dies out at ~1200Hz, since it works after 800Hz along with upperbass horn and gain 3dB. The response is fairly smooth and everything is very “cool”. What is not cool that it sounds like crap!

First thing first: the new channel honks. It does not honk when it runs stand alone, at least I was not able to detect it, but being incorporated into Macondo it screw up sound with ordinary old fashion, disgusting honk. There are many reasons of horns honking but usually it happens due to use of excessively low crossover point. I was lifting up the crossover to 1250Hz and it kills the honk but at the same time it killed the purpose of this horn. The only solution that I see in here is going for second order 500Hz -800Hz. It is what I will be trying next.

The second thing is an absolute mystic to me. The upperbass channel and the new channel crossed at 1000Hz do not sum but subtract amplitude at the listing position. Of could they are in-phase, and I checked it 32309756 times. But my RTA shows absolutely unambiguous that if the channels in-phase then the amplitude tanks but if I put the channels out-of-phase then I gain 3dB at crossover point, as I should in-phase. I have absolutely no explanation at this pint why it is so.

To be continuing…
Romy the caT


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-18-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
cv
Derby, United Kingdom
Posts 173
Joined on 09-15-2004

Post #: 27
Post ID: 2761
Reply to: 2759
Re: More mysteries - bizarre crossover effects
Romy,

That upper rolloff in the OPT comes from a number of distributed capacitances and leakage inductances in the transformer - it will not be a simple filter. Lots of transformers have weird resonances up at the top of their range. In fact, some makers rely on a resonance to push up the bandwidth. Otherwise, I vaguely recall that a well behaved transformer has a second order rolloff up top.

Ie it's a very complex low pass filter with less predictable phsae shift. That's one guess for why the channels are not summing as you'd expect.

I would think that relying on the OPT rolloff would be detrimental to sound. The load presented to the tube up there is going to be extremely reactive and screwy.

cheers
cv
08-18-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 28
Post ID: 2762
Reply to: 2761
No mysteries in there but still the bizarre crossover effect...
 cv wrote:
That upper rolloff in the OPT comes from a number of distributed capacitances and leakage inductances in the transformer - it will not be a simple filter. Lots of transformers have weird resonances up at the top of their range. In fact, some makers rely on a resonance to push up the bandwidth. Otherwise, I vaguely recall that a well behaved transformer has a second order rolloff up top.

Ie it's a very complex low pass filter with less predictable phsae shift. That's one guess for why the channels are not summing as you'd expect.

I would think that relying on the OPT rolloff would be detrimental to sound. The load presented to the tube up there is going to be extremely reactive and screwy.

Chris, it was not a rolloff by a transformer, I do not think that I said or implied it. I used a regular upper rolloff by a lowpass filter before the Melq’s input stage. If you look at the image below then in the new configuration the C5 cap is .047uF. It is all that makes the lowpass. The transformer at this channel is good to 22Khz and the 800Hz is very far form the critical range.

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
08-18-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 29
Post ID: 2763
Reply to: 2758
The new channel! Yes! I got it!!!

E-v-e-n-t-u-a-l-l-y!!! Eventually the new “fundamentals channel” horn sounds as it should being incorporated in my Macondo!  The key was the  second order. I really never drove compression drivers to their 500Hz as I always used upperbass horns that give me quite a luxury to utilize MF drivers in very sparing mode, using shorter MF horns with wider dissipation and less beaming. I was always suspect that the folks who use 500Hz 6dB/octave crossovers in typical the 330horn is horno-BS. Now I concluded that, at least with S2, and use 250Hz horn I can not go lover then 1350Hz…. Not god for my objectives to us the “fundamentals channel”

I put today second order into the game to lover the crossover point. The lover I able to go was ~500Hz arithmetically. I did not have correct values and the filter turned out to be something between Bessel and Butterworth. The response got was following:

The sound of the complete systems with the new hors? Absolutely wonderful – something that I, in a special way, was targeting and hoping. The transients at lover mid range become faster, somewhat “crisper” and more coherent but at the same time did not loose their “harmonic puffiness” (I will look it this further though). The lower MF got filed with very noble, typical for the Vitavox S2, tonal nuances with very high tonal contrast. Actually the entire sound became more transiently-realistic andmove even – very pleasant and very hoped feeling.

The honk? Not there anymore, although I still will raise the crossover point to >-500Hz. I am listening now the things that destroy practically any horn installation if any, even remote. signs of honk is hiding in a system: the contralto singers. The Marian Anderson’s Schubert and Ewa Podlles’ Tchaikovsky, Stravinsky and Mussorgsky - what would be more complex for the lover midrange and upperbass? The Podlles’ “Songs and Dances of Death” really got me and ....it is after hearing is many-many times…

I think that this “transient evenness” makes the total dynamic to perceive as slightly higher. I do not know why but it sounds this way, or perhaps today electricity is better tonight. Anyhow, it was the very first very positive result and I will capitalize on it. I did not asses imaging and many other factors but for a time being I’m ordering the coils for a perfect Bessel curve (will measure the impedance at the band-pass frequency) and will fine-tine the new drivers at 600Hz, second order. I begin to be very optimistic about the new horn…

Rgs,
Romy the caT


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-20-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
guy sergeant
United Kingdom
Posts 260
Joined on 08-03-2004

Post #: 30
Post ID: 2764
Reply to: 2763
Re: 2nd Order filter
Hi Romy,

Its good to hear you are now getting this horn to work more as you'd wish.

Perhaps Vitavox weren't such barbarians after all?!!!


CN458 Schematic  (500 Hz)


What values are you using?

rgs,

Guy
08-20-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 31
Post ID: 2765
Reply to: 2764
Yes, in my case 2nd Order.

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

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

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

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

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

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-20-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 32
Post ID: 2766
Reply to: 2765
The “fundamental channel”: the final tune.

Did today some critical listing. It is getting along very well. I would need some final adjustments of channels sensitivity (or tine the 6C33C)  and will wrap it up. I will post some general observations later on but for now there are a few sweeps.


The Cat




"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-20-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
hagtech


Hawaii
Posts 117
Joined on 02-13-2006

Post #: 33
Post ID: 2767
Reply to: 2765
Re: Honk that Horn?
 caT wrote:
Adding 1uf more and the horn being to sound like Altec horns…


Interesting.  I'm wondering here if this is the key to eliminating the honkiness I hear in most horn installations.  From your experiments, it seems that the low frequency extension is key.  Push it too far and it honks.  Is that correct?

My guess is that folks often do the math for cutoff frequency and then run the horn too close to that point, or worse, include it in the transition (handoff) to the next driver down.  I'm sure everyone here realizes the lower cutoff of a horn is quite abrupt.  I'm not sure what function it is, but the slope is steep.  That should correspond to some nasty phase shifts.  Maybe this is very simple.  Push the thing too far and it will honk.  Treat it with some respect and don't ask to much, it can sing. 

jh
08-20-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 34
Post ID: 2769
Reply to: 2767
The ordinary honk of the bad horns owners.

 hagtech wrote:
Interesting.  I'm wondering here if this is the key to eliminating the honkiness I hear in most horn installations.  From your experiments, it seems that the low frequency extension is key.  Push it too far and it honks.  Is that correct?

Oh, yes, sure. In 80% of all cases people try to push out more LF out of their MF hours. An extra 20-30Hz threw a horn into honk and you are done.  Particular it is applicable with light rectangular horns, typical for Altec-JBL-Klipsh-Votavox. The typical rule of sum that a crossover should be one full octave above the horn’s cut off. However, from there is it necessary to look further as frequency at which horn honk has to do with other aspects as well: ugliness of profile, imperfections of expansion, type and quality of cone damping, absolute frequency, amont of front chamber compression relatuve to the air-mass of horn, relative mass of horn to the horn rate and few others...

 hagtech wrote:
My guess is that folks often do the math for cutoff frequency and then run the horn too close to that point, or worse, include it in the transition (handoff) to the next driver down. 

Yes, it calls greed, total luck of any sensibility and total luck of any sensitivity to realty. Do you want me continue with my typical adjectives or they would be predictable? As I always say: audio is not about machinates but about people….

 hagtech wrote:
I'm sure everyone here realizes the lower cutoff of a horn is quite abrupt.  I'm not sure what function it is, but the slope is steep.  That should correspond to some nasty phase shifts.  Maybe this is very simple.  Push the thing too far and it will honk.  Treat it with some respect and don't ask to much, it can sing.

Usually horn decays with 2-3 order and when a crossover point hits the horn rate it begin to roll off sharper. The abrupt roll of at my Lover MF horn is die to 3 factors:

1) Own roll off of the horn mouth
2) Second order filet kicks in
3) Own roll off of the driver

Rgs,
Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-23-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 35
Post ID: 2774
Reply to: 2766
The “fundamental channel”: What a beauty!!!

Got today the parts and finalized the “perfect” Bessel passive crossover for my new channel. The coils are regular air-core 2.5H and 7H, the caps are Theta 10uF and the small wirewound tuning resistors that kills ~1.5dB in the channel. When I put all together everything came together. What the beautiful result!!! The most wonderful in it this, beside the sound itself, is that by tuning the resistor -/+ 1 dB it is possible very precisely dial-in the weight of the MF balance and it affects presentation very-very-very interestingly. My initial intention was to put there a small L-pad but then I realized that after a couple days of listening and finding the correct balance I would not need it any adjustability in there anymore. I think it will be something between 1Ohm and 2Ohm dropping resistor before the first coils.

Sometimes what I have time and intention I will try to drive the thing with own amp and a line lever filters…

But for now, the chanall and the Macondo do very excellent, they well fulfills my expectations and I’ very happy Cat.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-26-2006 Post mapped to 3 branches of Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 36
Post ID: 2784
Reply to: 2774
Some thoughts about my New Macondo's Absolute Tone

After the painstaking setting up of the new Macondo, measuring all distance, paralleling the horns and time-aligning everything, after the setting up a correct level of the new channel’s attenuation (it turned out -2dB was necessary) I spent some time to listing the altered Macondo.




The red thread is the diaphragm’s line of all channels. The extension of the top section of the woofer tower made intentionally to EQ the arriving tome to the listening position that is located much lower

The conclusion is very firm: the new channel will stay, permanently. The benefits of it are numerous and I would mention for a time being juts one of them: the tone. Audio people practically do not talk about tone, or something that I call “absolute tone” on context of audio playback. They do not do it because “absolute tone” is not a manageable properly in their intentions. Audio people (best of them) recognize “tone” as the property of recordings but they very rarely think of playback as something that might do discrimination of tone.  The various amplitude deviations of playbacks affect tonal characteristics of installations but when I talk about “absolute tone” I mean something very different just “tone”:

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/TreeItem.aspx?PostID=1249

The “absolute tone” is the absolute maximum of tonal complexity that a playback is capable to reproduces. It is like a violin. If we take for instance Amatis, Stradivaris or Guarneris then they might indicate a quality of “absolute tone”. It does not necessary mean that they under all conditions have better tone than some other best violins but under good conditions they are capabe to throw insultingly high (or interesting) tonal quality that might not be reached by “other” violins (particularly in ambient conditions). This absolute maximin amplitude of the “tonal sophistication” is not reachable by some "other" instruments, no mater what you do to them and how skillful players might be. The very same is with loudspeakers. They all have their “absolute tone” limitations. The audio people mostly do not consider them because the 99% of loudspeakers are “absolute tone” impotent. We do not really know where the “absolute tone capacity” derives from and audio engineers never cared to answer this question. Perhaps it is in materials or in design principles but I feel it rather in a sense of recognition and assessing of results – something that never was research seriously in audio.

Any discovery of audio elements that are capable for a higher degree of “absolute tone” is always accidental. Generally, some older drivers form 40s-50s: Altec, JBL, Western Electric, Klangfilm, Vitavox, Telefunken and few others had higher degree of “absolute tone” capacities but they all were horrible from other perspectives. The art of building Macondo, as any other acoustic systems that are “absolute tone minded” was to recognize and to embrace the best that those drivers can so but at the same time to make them to work in a totally unknown to them level of “precision” and in context of the more advanced and more demanding contemporary home-based horn system.  I stuck with Vitavox S2 driver exactly and only because it’s unreachable by any other known to me compression drivers “absolute tone”. Do not get me wrong. The Vitavox S2 is as crappy as any other vintage pro driver but I am dealing with it for a long time and I have learned how to treat it in order to get from it any more or less civilized sound. I feel that I had very-very serious “absolute tone” capacity in Macondo before the new channel was introduced. I think anyone who spend time, effort and common sense with many other best compression drivers might get good result out of them but it is imposable to jump of own head and any driver has own limits of “absolute tone”. I heard a lot of the best loudspeaker and I did not see many of them, if any, take “absolute tone” as far as Vitavoxed Macondo could (if electricity is good- the constant bitch of “absolute tone”). Partially it is difficult to fight with “absolute tone” at higher level of sensitivity where everything becomes much more complex.

The former version 4-ways Macondo was very good and did “absolute tone” at very-very serious level. It might sound like I’m juts a next typical Morons who just run my mouth about my gear. I would like to believe that it is not the case. For reasonable, not Moronic or interesting people I always was welcomed to put my actions behind my blabbering and actual to demonstrate Macondo sound. I know that some of you folks who visit my site were in my room and heard my inhalation. I hope it was adequate in relation to the verbiage that I express. However, there were always some areas that I would like to have taken further in Macondo. I will name just one of them.

The lower region of the clarinets, flutes, oboes, piccolos, recorders the mid regions of saxophones, bassoons, the entire family of the woodwind instruments and their relationship with “total sound filed” is very complicated subject for sound reproduction. Those sounds have tension; stress and “space” on real world but playback make them flat and un-granular. (The contemporary industry tendency to convert it into a miserable high pitch whistle and if the Morons doe not hear whistling the do not acknowledge “their quietly”). I always was looking for something that I call “frozen day sound” in woodwind instruments but at the same time I would like them to have the “absolute tone” AND be very-very soft (the contemporary drivers could not play “soft” and “crisp” as the same time). The new “upper fundamental channel”  moved the capacity of the “absolute tone” further, helping the “woodwind” problems,  by equalizing the transient evenness of my acoustic space but without violating the “absolute tone” constant. Very positive effect indeed…

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/TreeItem.aspx?postID=2768

I have to note that CDs do not go there where the NEW level of the Macondo’s “absolute tone” lives. Analog does or high sampling rate recordings do. I do not do today’s commercially available SACD (and sincerely feel that the people who do are Morons as they deal with very inferior materials and with very ignorant people). The 24bit is OK and the 88kHz-96kHz would do (I have no means to go for higher sampling rate and I do not know if it would be necessary). Anyhow, in the context of 24/88kHz the “frozen day sound” really blossoms and the New 5-ways Macondo can handle it better then before.

Now, I need a listening room twice larger for the New Macondo:-(

Rgs,
Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-27-2006 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
NBC
California
Posts 22
Joined on 08-10-2006

Post #: 37
Post ID: 2785
Reply to: 2784
Re: Some thoughts about my New Macondo
Don't get too big ego or anything Romy (as it would be unbecoming), but I think you are Brilliant.

Good "stuff" !!

Neil
07-28-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 38
Post ID: 4827
Reply to: 2784
"Absolute tone" - I was missing that Sound

My playback was in “distraction mode” for a few weeks. The electricity is horrible nowadays, summer… The arrival of APS made me to reposition all components disconnect everything and the failure of the APS so far to do what I want it to do did not encouraged me to put all my playback back together. So, all my cap was sitting “as is”, disconnected, and have been listening for the shitty Denon table-radio driving tiny Mission speakers…

Eventually I got sick from it and put today Milq and Macondo back to service. Hm, it looks like the efforts were not as stupid as always assume. Although the electricity is still not good but it is still a different sound all-together…

I got a few new recordings today: the wonderful Japanese pressing of Knappertsbusch’s Bruckner 7 only not with Weiner but with Kolner Rundfunk from 1963. The Bruckner and Macondo is a very different subject, I have feeling that Macondo even made me to “get” Bruckner.  I listened a few other things but what actually was most thrilling experience was Joseph Schmidt album, the opera and operetta fragments. It hardly imaginable that I need all Macondo’s capacity to play recordings from 30s. Think again.

Rgs, Romy the caT


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-07-2007 Post mapped to one branch of Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 39
Post ID: 4950
Reply to: 2759
The Fundamentals Channel around S2 is taken further.


 jessie.dazzle wrote:
I really appreciate the result of the 180Hz horn with the S2... Particularly in terms of "texture". It is responsible for such an important range...

Well, if you appreciate the lower knee of the S2 driver then wait unit you hear it’s perfomance with reduced dumping of the cone.

I have been trying to solve the dilemma why my 250Hz Tractrix does not allow itself to be loaded too closer to the horn rate. I was not able to go lower then 600Hz and their order (!!!) and it is not where I would like to be. When I was dropping the crossover point I was loosing the cleanness of S2 tone and it became muddy and nasal. I was and still am planning to do some modifications of the horn; I will post the pictures later on.

However, in addition to it, last nigh I decided to experiment with the damping of the driver’s cone. How pleased I was when with redaction of dumping I got instant improvement in the very direction I would like to have improvement. The channel began to response much lower and the most important the tone (with lower response) become absolutely free from any nasal colorations and from any dynamic congestions. I was listening again and again and was very pleased with the result (I was listening juts one Fundamentals channel).

I did not figure out how much the back chamber should be extended, my preliminary assessments that it should be for my horn made 4 times larger. I am seriously contemplating that if I will be ordering from my machine shop the extended S2 back chamber’s cover then to make it with adjustable volume (proposals are VERY welcome). As you can see on the picture the back plate should have larger (adjustable) chamber….

Well, this post would not be complete if I did not measure the thing, of course I did. I measured the lower knee of the S2 response in the Fundamentals Channel, way off the axis (~45 degree off). The channel is high-pass with one 25uF cap that makes around 400Hz, first order. In this animated image you will see one measurement (closed back) as a default S2 driver and another “with crack”. The crack was make by screwing off the back plate of the S2 drive for 1 turn and introducing (juts from one side) a  little, <1mm  crack between the diaphragm’s plate and the back chamber’s cover.

FundamentalChannel_9.gif


Rgs,
Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-10-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 40
Post ID: 4985
Reply to: 4950
Redesign the Vitavox S2 back chamber’s cover.

I really would like the Vitavox users who use the bottom region of S2 driver to pay very serious attention to my post above. The redaction of compression in this driver and dropping the resonance frequencies does impacts the lower knee sound of the driver very interestingly.

I am contemplating to modify or to make a brand new back chamber’s cover for S2 driver. In my new cover I would like to have an opportunity to gradually modify the volume of the back chamber. It would be not difficult to do with the gasket under the chamber’s cover but it would have own limitations (restricted Vmax) and problem with confortability. So I was wondering it I could make something more elegant.

I was thinking to make some kind of valve in the back chamber that would be adjustable from a very minor pressure drifting (.01 sq mm) to a relatively large, practically wide-open hole: 5-7 sq mm. Does anybody with mechanical skills could come up with some kind design ideas?


VitavoxS2_backChamber.JPG

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-10-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 41
Post ID: 4988
Reply to: 4985
Vent or Augment?

Romy,

Could you clarify : Would you like to vent the rear chamber or increase its volume (or both)?

jd*

PS : This weekend I will try listening with the rear covers on the Lower-Mids slightly open... I have to admit, I'm a bit nervous about high-passing the S2 much lower than 700Hz at 6dB/octave.



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
08-10-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 42
Post ID: 4989
Reply to: 4988
The chamber pressure leaking.

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
Could you clarify: Would you like to vent the rear chamber or increase its volume (or both)? This weekend I will try listening with the rear covers on the Lower-Mids slightly open... 

Good question. I do not really know what to answer. I know what I would like to accomplish but I do not know how it should be called.

Conceptually I would like it to have a whole in the back chamber but the whole should be like it covered by a material with variable acoustic transparency: from completely none-transparent to very transparent. My presumption is that if I will be able to introduce a managed and precise drift of pressure from the back chamber then it will be near identical to the increase the back chamber its volume. In fact the managed drift might be even more beneficial (I presume) as it will increase it’s effectiveness with increase of volume of signal.

Sure, it is just hypothetic but when this weekend you will be playing with adjusting the size of the crack on your Lower-Mids you might hear what I would like to accomplish. BTW, share your thoughts if you do not like it and do not forget that you will loose a couple dBs of output .

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
I have to admit, I'm a bit nervous about high-passing the S2 much lower than 700Hz at 6dB/octave.

It is exactly what I’m wondering. The 500-600Hz with second order does fine. Where would be the first order equivalent? This question consists off:

1) How much power the driver will be able to handle. From one side the aluminum cones ten to crack, from another side I drive it with no power: ½ 6C33C and ~14dB divider. I have no answer to it but I hear some dangers sonic effects when I drove the driver with 450Hz first order (25uF)

2) How much LF extension do I actually NEED from my Fundamental Channel? I mean where the quality of the Fundamentals Channel begin to be better or worse in relation to the Upperbass charnel? I would like do not finalize my judgment at this point as currently I have one dedicated Milq Channel driving both Macondo’s Fundamentals and Upperbass Channel. I presume that in a few weeks whwn I go one Macondo Channel to one Melquiades Channel then I will eliminate the S2’s and Fane’s coils talk to each other, not to mention getting rig the  speakers level filter from Lover MF Channel. When I do fully bi-amp then I will review the actual sound from both channels. Yep, it would like to have at that time the opportunity to play with the pressure drift/leak from the S2’s back chamber…

Rgs, Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-10-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 43
Post ID: 4990
Reply to: 4985
A range of spacers?
Well, once you get to machining it's expensive anyway, but you might re-use your old cover along with a series of simple shims and/or spacers of varying thicknesses/lengths, and use studs with nuts in lieu of bolts to retain the now-varying-thickness assembly.  This would allow you to re-coup set-up costs by repeating the basic pattern with only its thickness/length as a change.  This would also mean you have to change out the spacers each time to change volume, but it would at least keep the internal pressure +/- consistent (if not constant...) across the driver for any given volume.  If you mean to put in a Schrader valve or threaded hollow bolt (light fixtures), they are available to mount into threads tapped into or a nut welded to a hole drilled through the cover.  Of course the load would change with the temperature, ie, it would not be constant, nor linear, practically speaking.  IF you use a valve to add air, it seems offhand like it might even play out that you get one "measured" pressure while adding air and another pressure a few seconds later, ie, there might be no practical way to "measure/repeat" it IF it is air you are adding.

Somehow it seems like it would be nice to have a fairly dense foam (like that horrible stuff from the can...) coating the "walls" of that chamber.

But then, I am the student here, and I am quite pleased to gravytrain.


Best regards,
Paul S 
08-10-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 44
Post ID: 4991
Reply to: 4985
A microscopic pneumatic valve? The field-coil… diaphragm damping?
What I think I would need is microscopic pneumatic valve that I would be able to stick into my back chamber and that would have a little-bolt that would allow adjusting the diameter of the leaking “port”... Sure, it would be fun to have the valve to be managed very prissily by electromagnet. Hm, I wonder: if it would have an electric driver then how fun would be to drive that valve with an the extracted impending voltage of the actual signal?

VitavoxS2_backChamberVlave.JPG


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-10-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 45
Post ID: 4993
Reply to: 4991
Control that leak!
Try this :

http://news.thomasnet.com/fullstory/489086

Miniature Cartridge Needle Valve

Beswick Engineering designs and manufactures high-performance miniature fluid power devices.

Beswick introduces a miniature Cartridge Needle Valve for precise flow adjustment in an extremely compact package. This innovative product can be used to control mini-cylinders, nozzles, timing circuits, filling heads, bleed vents, and in many other applications. It is designed for incorporation into manifold assemblies. Cartridge valves in concert with a manifold offer a smaller envelope, reduced assembly time and fewer parts. O-ring seals throughout the valve insure a leak proof installation.

The Cartridge Needle Valve allows precise flow control due to 56 threads per inch adjustment and three degree taper of the needle. The adjusted flow remains stable even during temperature fluctuations as the needle and valve seat are both manufactured from stainless steel. Maximum inlet pressure is 300 psig. The valve controls flows from 0 to 1 SCFM at 50 psig. The metal to metal seal provides positive shut-off down to negative pressure/vacuum of 25 in HG. The installation height is only15/16 inch. The inlet/installation thread is a 10-32 external thread with an O-ring face seal for leak tight connections.

The miniature Cartridge Needle Valve is fabricated entirely from stainless steel and it is available with a wide variety of elastomeric seals to allow excellent corrosion resistance, fluid compatibility and thermal resistance.

Applications include: fuel cell industry, medical and dental equipment, instruments, laboratory equipment, semiconductor manufacturing equipment, aerospace equipment, packaging machinery, industrial robots and many more.

Beswick products include: fittings, valves, quick disconnects, pressure regulators/gauges, cylinders, filters, orifices, shock absorbers, pressure electric switches, tubing, etc. Beswick speaks your language and can custom design products to meet your specific requirements.

For more information, please contact:
Mike Donati
Beswick Engineering Co., Inc.
284 Ocean Road, Greenland, NH 03840-2442 USA
Phone: +1 603.433.1188
Fax: +1 603.433.3313
E-mail: mdonati@beswick.com
Website: http://www.beswick.com


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
08-10-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 46
Post ID: 4994
Reply to: 4993
control that leak! Part II
Romy,

Forgot to mention... The same people also offer a stepper-motor-actuated version, making it possible to do what you suggested above.

See it here (Scroll down to "Actuated Metering Valve") :
http://www.mediaworks.co.in/beswick/products/custom_products.php

Actuated Metering Valve

This stepper motor actuated valve offers precise flow metering in a hermetic enclosure. The stepper motor actuation provides up to 50 steps of opening/closing and the customizable resistance curve allows the flow response to be tailored to the application. The enclosed design eliminates all dynamic seals for a leak proof operation.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
08-10-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 47
Post ID: 4995
Reply to: 4994
The leaked S2, one step forward & two back

Thanks, Jessie. I just will buy that Beswick Engineering valve, it looks like it is the right size and it look like it will do what I need

I made some experiments applying large gaskets to cover of the back chamber. I used a gaskets up to 12 mm but I did not detect that it impacted sound in the right direction. In fact the maximum chamber size that I was able to get with gasket sounded virtually identical is the default Vitavox chamber size. A 1-2mm crack into back chamber, however, made all different. I will be very enthusiastic to hear your feedback when you try it with your 180Hz horn. The 700Hz first order or the 450-500Hz second order will do, though I do not know if you will be able to stress enough the bottom response of that horn with S2 driver.

As I told, I am as now undecided about the benefits of the S2’s back chamber leaking for the Fundamental Channel. The sound is unquestionably and uncontestable “cleaner” but there are a lot of other things that I would like to consider. For whatever reason that cleaner sound from Fundamental Channel creates overly-necessary “directivity” in sound. The defaultly-damped S2 has it its bottom knee a minor touch of nozzleless, it sounds if it “chough a cold”, it has that hazy, smoky vale that sets an atmosphere of “noble mysticism”. It might have overwhelming amount of measurable distortions but at the same time that refined, superbly articulate and very intelligently-dosed nozzleless, in contacts of proper mixing with the rest of Macondo, can do some tricks, even purely Audio tricks, that are hardly imaginable with others drivers or topologies.

For instants I like set the Fundamental Channel (if recordings allowed of course) that the sound of violin sections are handled by Macondo MF directionally but the sound of English horns, flutes, oboes (if the playing of the give piece and orchestra intended to) is completely  non-directional. A properly set up Macondo, while maintaining extremely strong and very precise imaging for entire orchestra can throw horns or flutes from nowhere, almost like it is out of phase, coming from everywhere, and then, if the players/conductor willing to, then it capable to set the horns at the very precise position right where they should be for a given recording. What I detected that “leaked S2” driver has much cleaner, much much much cleaner sound but it doesn't have that foggy capacity to sound like it come from “nowhere”. It is too directional and too “straight”…

This subject is required more experiments, but to catch that fish would require a clean pond… The electricity now is so bad that it is okay to listening music but it is virtually impossible to do Audio. So, I would propone my further experiments for later, preferably when six-channel-Milq will be up and running, or perhaps you will come up with further observations.

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
08-10-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 48
Post ID: 4996
Reply to: 4995
0 - 1 SCFM at 50 PSI?

OK, I am too lazy to run any curves on this, but is that the range of "bleed-off" you want for music?

As I understand it, the [R.] Goldberg Variation screws this thing in and out "really fast" along with the music in order to adjust/compensate for pressure differences?

Would the servo/stepper know the difference between complex material and volume changes?

If this actually "works", you absolutely MUST patent it!

In fact, it looks so good on paper that you should patent and sell it anyway!

Best regards,
Paul S

08-11-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 49
Post ID: 4998
Reply to: 4995
Controlling my own leak!
Romy,

Ok... I tried it... I backed off the screws securing the rear cover on one of the S2s I use with a pair of 180Hz horns. I backed off each screw a total of two turns, leaving a gap of 1.5mm.

I also did some measuring, and had left a 400Hz tone playing when I backed off the screws; I was surprized at just how much sound came out the rear once I vented the cover.

All listening and measuring was done using only one channel, with only the one 180Hz horn connected and band-passed as usual at 790-3200Hz.

Sound ; vented vs. sealed :

With this horn there is not that much difference... Playing a pure tone reveals that with the cover vented the sound goes slightly softer. With a male voice playing I would say that there is a sort of slight effect of increased depth (reminds me of an echo).

I am unable to post the image directly, but below is a link to the measured results taken while playing a closely spaced series of tones from a tone generator at constant volume... I used the exact same set up, and played the exact same series of tones both with cover tight and vented.



The vented cover measures almost identically in my horn... The only area of significant divergence happens at just below 600Hz, where the vented cover driver surprisingly drops out, leaving about a 100Hz gap (click on link to see graph). I ran the test several times to make sure, and got the same results each time.

I don't know why you are getting such clearly better results from your horn with a vented driver.

Now that I have all the measurement stuff out, I think I'll take a "look" at the other horns...

jd*



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
08-11-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 50
Post ID: 4999
Reply to: 4998
The Bermuda Triangle rediscovered?

Hm, very different and very opposite result, interesting. Are you using the same S2 diaphragm as I do – the metal suspension? If yes then it would be the only one explanation that I might come up with.

Sometime the compression drivers with horn form a very subtle and very bizarre combination when the horn’s throat reactance damps the cone (along with it it’s back chamber) but not juts damps but does it in hipper critical mode when any minute deviation of the loading (like changing the bag-screens density) immediately threw the cone’s damping in one or another extremes. I personally never had it in such a sever care as I have it now but I heard that it might happen and to be VERY notable.

Vitavox did in 180Hz, 220Hz, 300Hz and 330Hz horns, all exponential. We know how S2 behaves in 330Hz – it was made for S2 driver. Interesting that neither Vitavox not any another company that I might recall as not ever did 250Hz hors. Altec did 329A and 311 horns that were 220Hz. The JBL did the same: 220Hz and 300Hz – never 250Hz, at least that I know off. Sure it would not indicate anything, as the balance between the specific driver and the horn size (mass if air in the horn’s belly) is the key. Still, it is juts data…

So, I might presume that at 250Hz and the metal suspended S2 I accidentally hit the “G-spot” of the horn-driver tandem, I am sure that if I measure the driver’s impedance then it will jump like a rollercoaster. Continuing the hypnotizing…. When you went for 180Hz horn you with air in that horn was way beyond the “dangers air-mass” and therefore you did not experience problems. If my hypnotizes is true then I might cure what I have by changing the pressure from back or the front of the cone and then trying to load the driver lower, to see it is will be able to handle it. In fact the leaking of the back chamber is one of those attempts … The sonic differences that I getting is not minor and very easily auditable….

I think if my hypnotize is true then that accidental hyper-fragile equidistant between the cone’ back damping, specific horn size and throat resistance deserved to be named. I propose to call it the “Horn’s Bermuda Triangle”….

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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