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In the Forum: Horn-Loaded Speakers
In the Thread: If you were to start from scratch, what horn system would you build?
Post Subject: The main benefit is in the type of sound presentationPosted by haralanov on: 2/13/2012
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Romy the Cat wrote: |
...to hear it from a person who advocates a single driver approach :-) |
|
Hahhaha, if
you call the combination of 4x23” + 4x15” + 12”+ 8” +2” a single driver
approach, then the people who really use single driver speakers should be
called driverless :-)))
Romy, the actual
sound benefit of this 4-channel upper bass configuration, is rather in the type
of sound presentation. The commonly used single upper bass horn (or direct
radiator) sitting under the midrange horn, gives the feeling that the midrange
floats over a dense and soft upper bass cloud. It is in a way interesting
effect, but it is much more interesting (at least in my view) when the upper
bass radiating area is very big AND equally distributed around the
midrange/main channel. This creates an effect of having huge and very widerange
coaxial driver, which gives the unique feeling that the upper bass is real
physical part of the midrange, loading the whole (!) room with tone. Actually
it can no longer be detected as upper bass sound – it just becomes part of the
instruments. And this is much more important than the fine tuning of the sound
of all these 4 horns. Of course it is huge benefit to imply 4 slightly
different UB tones combining in one very complex tone. And just like you said,
one can use 4 slightly different amps for these 4 slightly different UB
driver/horns for even more complex tone, so practically one can adjust
thousands of variables…
Best
regards,
Haralanov
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