| Search | Login/Register
   Home » Horn-Loaded Speakers» Problems with horns: mid-range horns. (9 posts, 1 page)
  Print Thread | 1st Post |  
Page 1 of 1 (9 items) Select Pages: 
   Target    Threads for related reading   Most recent post in related threads   Forum  Replies   Views   Started 
  »  New  Problems with horns: tweeters...  Re: HF “wildness”...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     25  224298  07-11-2004
  »  New  Problems with horns: mid-range drivers..  Problems with horns: mid-range drivers...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     0  36988  07-13-2004
  »  New  Problems with horns: upper bass ..  Must it be about loading?...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     109  1170551  03-25-2005
  »  New  The Multicells HF Horns...  Construction plans of Altec 1505...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     9  119144  04-22-2005
  »  New  LeCleach vs. tratrix and ...Zigmond Froid..  LeCleach vs. tratrix and ...Zigmond Froid...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     0  22594  12-09-2005
  »  New  Big mama 1.5" horns......  Crossover point...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     27  239606  09-08-2006
  »  New  Make Your Own Horns..  Texture and Consistency...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     2  34250  01-26-2007
  »  New  The Ridiculous Japa-Brazilian horn. ..  I think you are misting the other side of the picture....  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     54  411797  03-02-2007
  »  New  Musique Concrete horns..  These are now sold as Kornhent products...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     6  108259  06-12-2007
  »  New  An Interview With Dr. Bruce Edgar..  An Interview With Dr. Bruce Edgar...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     0  72431  07-10-2007
  »  New  Open cell foam in horns and MF drivers..  Radian replacement for 2482...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     40  398842  01-25-2008
  »  New  The state of High-Efficiency Loudspeakers...  Tom Danley’s brilliant law...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     6  90641  02-25-2009
  »  New  The Evolution of Honk...  Horn-loading and compression had no direct relativity t...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     2  30508  06-06-2010
07-21-2004 Post mapped to one branch of Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,155
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 1
Post ID: 103
Reply to: 103
Problems with horns: mid-range horns.

Ok, I blamed the tweeters and MF drivers now the turn of the MF horns. The Mid Frequency Horns (I’ll them “MFH” from now and on) are the stinky like pieces of horn installations, and if they are not done correct then they screw up anything big time The MHF hugely responsible for the crapy sound horns usual blamed for.

There are two most critical zones of sound reproduction that hugely affect out perception of reproduced sound: upper bass and upper midrange. The MFH cover upper midrange and come very close to upper bass. Therefore “how” they cover it is very accentual.

Depth of the MHF regulates the EQ of LF and attenuation of HF and the depth (as a function of a cut-off frequency projected to size of the throat, along with few other parameters) should be properly match with the sonic idiosyncrasy of a chosen driver and the way how the driver/MFH tandem is used in context of the entire installation.  The problem in here is that it is very difficult to try the things. After something is done at a certain level of perfection a result should be evaluated and if you need to change something then you have to redo the entire. It is very rare that it possible to extrapolate the result and it is not always perfectly predicable. I spent 3 years of listing different MF drivers in order to tech myself how to interpret the sound of drivers until I reached a point that I learned what to listen in driver while I listen a driver and until I was able roughly predict how a driver will sound in a system by listening a bare compression driver that just sits on a floor, without a horn.  However, I never was able to say with more or less degree probability what would happen with different horns.

Let star to talk about the profiles. There are few available parabolic, tractrix, conical, exponential, hyperbolic, combined, forced and few others. All of them produced different efficiency boost and different distortions patter. I know little about distortions or at least I know little how to interpret the contribution of horn distortions to musicality. Different drivers act in different horn’s profile differently and each profile has own “twist”.  Perhaps there is a bit of theory behind all of this but I do not know about it. I am just a user who specializes of using playback and I do not build theories around playback but just recognize and use the patterns. Among the horns what I head so far I find that a tractrix MFH, of a half crossover point and +6dB efficiency gain, cut above the primary resonance frequency was something that delivers more predictable and stable result.  Tractrix (I, being me, call it tatrix sometimes) is shorter and it produces less “intricate sound” (VERY loaded statement). The Tractrix sound is very easy to handle and well integrateable…. Did I mention that I was talking about the round tatrix horns?

Here we go… the Pandora Box for the MFH about to be opened…

It never came to me why the hell such huge amounts of completely idiotic rectangular MHF were produced. All of those rectangular MFH – big, large, regardless of material, level of implementation, brand or price tag – are garbage and this rectangular shape is a primary reason why horns sound like *** most of the time (I would like to point out that I am taking now about the mid-rage horns only). The rectangular MFH screw up imaging (big time), highly complicate or make impossible a proper integrations, very prone to severe off-axis complications, practically unusable in nearfield, have peculiar roughness and aggressiveness changing with off-axis and have many other obvious and hidden problems. A minor exception might be multi-sell horn, used at very large distance, but the multi-sells are totally different story. Anyhow, the rectangular horns (including the 2-3-4 sell horns) are just a pile of huge horno-foolishness that discredit whole idea or horn loading. Wean I say the MFH is mean explicitly round horns but not all that rectangular junk that the professional, semi-professional and move-oriented companies managed to produce in their past.

The material for the MFH. The material of the MFH is important. However, the important thing is what it does but not what it is. It is quite possible that a specific none-perfect driver, used in a certain way, in context of a specific MFH none-perfect material and specific manufacturing methods might perform quite well. It does not necessarily make the diver material universally good or bad. I experimented with a number of horns and concluded that the best predictably-stable result is possible to get out of a situation when a driver does not communicate with horn -then the drivers’ quality become prominent. However, having personal tangency to high-attitude drivers I would like to see MFH is as “slow” as possible. Paper-made MFH, if they are properly done and heavy enough are great. The lead horns are spectacular! Wooden horns are, if the made form very damped wood are very good and very ease to deal with. Different brands of plastic might be used for MFH and if they done expensive and properly finished then they might be quite good. Ironically most of the commercial horns are made form a light metal (aluminum and so on) and they are very bad. To make those Altec, JBL, Vitavox, WE and so on horn do not ring you would need to dump a Chernobyl Sarcophagus on then to tame them down. Most of the light metal they will sound too obnoxious, not to mention the all of them are rectangular corny-sounding junk. (Actually I use “corny” in here literally :-)

Another important point that coastally neglected and the severely degrade the horn results is the fact that any HF horns and MFH (mouths) should be hanged in open air. Yes, they do recognize boundaries near thier months. If you see a horn that sits inside of a baffle and its month is continuation of any close focal parallel surface then you do not hear the horn but the dirt the bouncing form the baffle at 180 degree.  The fantasies that people love to spread about the horns suggesting that MFH has narrow radiations and less sensitively to boundaries are completely groundless. Quite opposite: a properly built horn in context of a properly built installation should be superbly sensitive to anything in the room (The horns are velocity condoled system and therefore with horns you are deep into phase domain and this fact enforces a bunch of special precautions that are not so critical with mass controlled direct radiators. I will cover it further on in “THE PROBLEMS WITH HORNS: TIMING DOMAIN”)

One more common absurdity that widely popular but work very bad for Sound: the attempt of people to make “cool looking” MFH.  I understand that you spend more time with your MFH then you do with a breast of your women however the “cool” and shiny MFH screw Sound. The well-polished, glossy horns look great on the pictures and marketing catalogs but they sound “strange”. With complex musical crescendos (and particular at upper mid range) they weep and sound sort of “slips” across the horn. In addition, the well-polished MFH are way more susceptible to let Sound to inherent the signature of the MHF material: more granularity of the horn surface  = less influence of the material to the horn. It you take an ultra-light plastic glossy MFH and paint it with a textured paint then it will substantially minimized the coloration of the thin plastic. The best surface for a horn an ultra-soft wood with a lot of wooden hair sticking right into the horn pathway. However, this type of the finishing might be too dumped for the mellow drivers (like Altec for instance). The most optimum all-around is to have a MHF made according to what I call LS+H+St scenario. It means the MFH should have a LOT of soft body and a lot of soft mass with superb damping ability (LS-layer). Then, it comes the H-layers: hard and ultra thin surface crisp. Eventually the St-layer should finish the MFH. The “St” comes form “structured” or some kind of finishing-substitute for the “hair” that I mentioned above. The idea is that Sound should not use horn like absolute bouncing surface but should perceive it in a way in which a good Jewish bagel made: crispy but slightly abrasive outside, however chewy and tender inside.


I sincerely believe that a biggest problem with the MFH is a shortage of people who actually manufacture them. It is NOT complex to make a good horn form whatever material. What is complicated is to make a horn exactly how you need it for a given driver and a given application. Most of the horn-makers make the generic horns and their horns produce too generic result. In order to push the envelop of the horn’s reproduction you should really make your “perfect horn” for your own perfect driver and your unique situation in which you intend to use it. Unfortunately to find a manufacturing house that will listen you is big rarity and mostly it forces people to compromise the means and consequentially to compromise the result. Mostly the manufacturing houses do whatever is comfortable for them to produce and frankly speaking they even there do quite crapy job. I’ve seen a lot of high-paranoia and high-snobbism horns that were done very purely or even very stupidly. I believe that MFH-makers should not sell the generic horns as it completely screw up the idea and is mostly it is the reason why most horn installations sound “as is” instead of how they should.

The next post will combine subject of upper bass drivers and upper bass horns. It will be “THE PROBLEMS WITH HORNS: UPPER BASS”

Please be advised that I recognize bass as something that should be reproduced by 2-3 channels and each channel should have own requirement and sometime even quite distinctive means of reproduction. I DO NOT BELIEVE in the lower bass reproduction by horn loading and there are many reasons why. Therefore. I will not cover in this thread the horn repudiation of lower bass.

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
03-23-2005 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
slowmotion


Oslo, Norway
Posts 60
Joined on 07-22-2004

Post #: 2
Post ID: 794
Reply to: 103
Re: Problems with horns: upper bass.

mirtazapine alcohol hangover

mirtazapine and alcohol death
Hi all



Romy wrote:


"The next post will combine subject of upper bass drivers and upper bass horns. It will be “THE PROBLEMS WITH HORNS: UPPER BASS”

Please be advised that I recognize bass as something that should be reproduced by 2-3 channels and each channel should have own requirement and sometime even quite distinctive means of reproduction. I DO NOT BELIEVE in the lower bass reproduction by horn loading and there are many reasons why. Therefore. I will not cover in this thread the horn repudiation of lower bass.

Rgs,
Romy the Cat "



So, any thoughts ?

cheers,
Jan
03-23-2005 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,155
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 3
Post ID: 795
Reply to: 794
Problems with upper bass - SOON

prevacid

prevacid
Yes, you right. There are some threads where I should return and finish what I started. The “middbas” section was 80% written but I abandoned it due to luck of time and a shortage of encouragement. I should certainly finish the job. I will find the document at my file server, will complete it and will post within a couple days.

Rgs, Romy


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
01-26-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Dominic
Montreal, Canada
Posts 69
Joined on 08-23-2006

Post #: 4
Post ID: 3561
Reply to: 103
Elaboration on the intricacy of tractrix
Hey, Rom, could you elaborate on the idea of a tractrix being "less intricate"? Seems like an interesting idea, but i don't really know what you mean.
01-27-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,155
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 5
Post ID: 3579
Reply to: 3561
The the "intricacy" of tractrix
 Dominic wrote:
Hey, Rom, could you elaborate on the idea of a tractrix being "less intricate"? Seems like an interesting idea, but i don't really know what you mean.
I can talk a lot about it but to in short: Tractrix has maximum gain among all profiles relative to the length of the horn. Also, Tractrix has higher tolerance, when overloading when other horns usually drive them into honk. Even if Tractrix does begin to “clip with honks” then it does it in much less revolting fusion then other horns…. It is a big subject and I do not think that we need to know “whys” - we need juts use it.

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
11-13-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
tuga


Posts 174
Joined on 12-26-2007

Post #: 6
Post ID: 8852
Reply to: 103
400Hz horns: which length?
fiogf49gjkf0d
Hello Romy and everyone,

I am going to order a pair of 400Hz/1" tractrix horns from http://www.stereo-lab.de/tractrix.html to replace/compare with a pair of 500Hz TAD-like square mouth horns.
These are to be used initially with the drivers that came with the improperly implemented two way commercial speakers (1" compression drivers, 12" paper cone drivers in ported boxes) that I bought for experimenting. With information I have been gathering from reading the website I have changed the crossover frequency from 500Hz to 1000Hz and recently added a Visaton horn tweeter (that I am currently experimenting with).
From the pictures on Stereo Lab's website, it looks like they make more than one length. How does this affect sound and which would better suit a driver operating between 1000Hz and 12000/15000Hz?

Thanks,
Tuga


"Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira Pascoaes
11-13-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,155
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 7
Post ID: 8854
Reply to: 8852
Length = profile/throat
fiogf49gjkf0d
I am not sure what you are asking. If you willing to get 400Hz horn into 1” tractrix then it might not be any controversy about the horn’s length, it is already given and the folks from lab.de will know it and will do the right length. If they have more than one length for the same mouth rate then those horns have ether different profile or they targeted against different throat diameter. There are no the other options in existence.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
11-14-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
tuga


Posts 174
Joined on 12-26-2007

Post #: 8
Post ID: 8860
Reply to: 8854
What about horn frequency?
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
I am not sure what you are asking. If you willing to get 400Hz horn into 1” tractrix then it might not be any controversy about the horn’s length, it is already given and the folks from lab.de will know it and will do the right length. If they have more than one length for the same mouth rate then those horns have ether different profile or they targeted against different throat diameter. There are no the other options in existence.


Thank you Romy. I wanted to make sure I wouldn't be doing a beginners' mistake before ordering.

Do you see any controversy in using a 400Hz horn for the 10000-12000Hz range? Alternatively I can order a 600Hz horn although it wont be as flexible when I upgrade the drivers. Would a 600Hz horn perform well starting at 800Hz?

Best,
Tuga


"Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira Pascoaes
01-08-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
tuga


Posts 174
Joined on 12-26-2007

Post #: 9
Post ID: 9368
Reply to: 8854
First or second order for 1" driver.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
I am not sure what you are asking. If you willing to get 400Hz horn into 1” tractrix then it might not be any controversy about the horn’s length, it is already given and the folks from lab.de will know it and will do the right length. If they have more than one length for the same mouth rate then those horns have ether different profile or they targeted against different throat diameter. There are no the other options in existence.


Hello Romy,

The Stereo-Lab horns have arrived and I have mounted them on temporary supports: on a first analysis clarity, imaging and tonal gradations have improved considerably; and, although I haven't made any measurements, I think that they have increase MF gain.
I have felt the need to move further away from the speakers but this could be due to the overly high position of the MF horn, something that I am planning to correct.
I am passing them at 1.000Hz and 12.500Hz.
Now the question is whether to go first on second order.

Best,
Tuga


"Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira Pascoaes
Page 1 of 1 (9 items) Select Pages: 
   Target    Threads for related reading   Most recent post in related threads   Forum  Replies   Views   Started 
  »  New  Problems with horns: tweeters...  Re: HF “wildness”...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     25  224298  07-11-2004
  »  New  Problems with horns: mid-range drivers..  Problems with horns: mid-range drivers...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     0  36988  07-13-2004
  »  New  Problems with horns: upper bass ..  Must it be about loading?...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     109  1170551  03-25-2005
  »  New  The Multicells HF Horns...  Construction plans of Altec 1505...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     9  119144  04-22-2005
  »  New  LeCleach vs. tratrix and ...Zigmond Froid..  LeCleach vs. tratrix and ...Zigmond Froid...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     0  22594  12-09-2005
  »  New  Big mama 1.5" horns......  Crossover point...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     27  239606  09-08-2006
  »  New  Make Your Own Horns..  Texture and Consistency...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     2  34250  01-26-2007
  »  New  The Ridiculous Japa-Brazilian horn. ..  I think you are misting the other side of the picture....  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     54  411797  03-02-2007
  »  New  Musique Concrete horns..  These are now sold as Kornhent products...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     6  108259  06-12-2007
  »  New  An Interview With Dr. Bruce Edgar..  An Interview With Dr. Bruce Edgar...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     0  72431  07-10-2007
  »  New  Open cell foam in horns and MF drivers..  Radian replacement for 2482...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     40  398842  01-25-2008
  »  New  The state of High-Efficiency Loudspeakers...  Tom Danley’s brilliant law...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     6  90641  02-25-2009
  »  New  The Evolution of Honk...  Horn-loading and compression had no direct relativity t...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     2  30508  06-06-2010
Home Page  |  Last 24Hours  | Search  |  SiteMap  | Questions or Problems | Copyright Note
The content of all messages within the Forums Copyright © by authors of the posts