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04-23-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 141
Post ID: 10332
Reply to: 10313
Materials : 40Hz horn
fiogf49gjkf0d
Lbiefferies7 wrote :


"... I am interested in knowing the material that you made these out of... I've read you mention doing patents, so if "mum's the word," I can certainly respect that..."


No problem... If ever I were to make horns for sale to others, I would definitely not make them the way I've made these or my other horns. The processes used here are fine for making one set, or a functioning prototype. Doing it this way as a commercial venture would require that one use 3rd world labor, and even then, I would still use other processes.


The product used for the 40Hz horn is made in Germany; it is marketed in France under the name "Plasticrete". There is surprisingly little information out there on this stuff. I've done internet research for the equivalent in the US, but came up with zero. It was once used in, among other places, the auto industry, to make quick molds of clay prototype models. There are people in Detroit who must know where to get it.


It consists of a liquid used to laminate fibers. 


The fibers are soaked in an acrylic liquid (looks sort of like thinned out wood glue), mixed with an acrylic powder (looks like plaster). The ratio is 1 part liquid to 2 parts powder (a drill with a mixing attachment is about the only way to get it properly mixed). The resulting liquid is of a similar viscosity and appearance to the batter used to make crepes over here. The soaked fibers are then placed on the forming tool and left for 3 hours, after which point the lamination is fully cured; hard but not brittle.


I would guess that about half of Las Vegas is made of this stuff, so there must be an equivalent in the US. Over here it is expensive. One mid-bass horn costs me 2000€ in materials (just the bare horn, without driver, chassis, rear chamber, etc).


Materials_01.jpg


Above : On the shelves are most of the materials that go into one 40Hz horn. On the top shelf is a roll of very thick chopped strand fiberglass mat, which was developed specifically for this process (one horn takes more than just this one 60m roll)... When rolled up, the fibers are compressed, when unrolled they expand and soak up a LOT of the liquid. The resulting lamination is extremely heavy. One advantage of the product is an absence of shrinkage.


Some may be wondering how I know that one horn weighs around 900 lbs... I know this because I pay for the materials by weight, and I waste almost nothing. Yes that shelving unit is overloaded; the wheels are flat-spotted and will not roll. The whole thing just started swaying why I tried.


To the left of the shelf is a large sewer pipe that will serve to make the adjustable rear chambers (see upper-bass horn a couple pages back).


"... Is there something I should know before I cast my upperbass horns?..."


I assume you mean with regard to matarials (?). From what material will you make them?


"...Aesthetics wise, it looks like you were the designer of the Ariel Atom or Deronda or Caparo T1..."


Well... It would be "off-thread" to go into that; I already feel guilt for having posted photos of my cats!


jd*




How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
04-23-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Lbjefferies7
Southern California
Posts 49
Joined on 01-11-2008

Post #: 142
Post ID: 10335
Reply to: 10332
Thanks
fiogf49gjkf0d

"... Is there something I should know before I cast my upperbass horns?..."


I assume you mean with regard to matarials (?). From what material will you make them?

Thanks for replying...I'll email you as not to clutter the thread.




I'm not interested in having an orchestra sound like itself. I want it to sound like the composer. Leonard Bernstein
04-23-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
scooter
Posts 161
Joined on 07-17-2008

Post #: 143
Post ID: 10336
Reply to: 10335
Car motor lifter recommendation...
fiogf49gjkf0d
Jessie:

Incredible project!  Surfboard makers or large boat supply companies may have a view regarding similar resins and fiberglass available in the US.

I could not figure how you managed to injure you back but now it is abundantly clear. By the way, you might want to rent one of those car motor lifters (with wheels) to move these things around next time.  A US lift might be better as all of our cars have 7 litre engines (vs those 1 litre lightweights in France).  Regardless, I would guess even the euro lifts could work.

Keep up the good work and please continue to clutter the thread with progress, photos, updates and details.  

S
07-22-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,159
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 144
Post ID: 11149
Reply to: 7981
Finding a home for midbass horns.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 jessie.dazzle wrote:


1) Set horns to fire all in same direction (will require some modification to the house)
2) Move to a new house


Jessie,

As I understand you in the middle of your midbass horn project were forced (or whatever reasons were) to move to new house.  How much you new purchasing/renting decision was affected by the fact that you have two 50Hz horns to move in with you. Ok, do not answer this; I know what the answer will be. What I more interested is what criteria you used, besides the obvious, in your real-estate research?

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
07-23-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 145
Post ID: 11155
Reply to: 11149
On the move
fiogf49gjkf0d
So it sounds like you're considering a move...

Romy wrote :

"...As I understand you in the middle of your midbass horn project were forced (or whatever reasons were) to move to new house..." 
  
My old place would have been perfect for the large horns. The reason I moved is sort of interesting; my ex is a painter, and everything was going fine until at a certain point, the horns started getting far too much attention from her art-collecting visitors...

"...How much you new purchasing/renting decision was affected by the fact that you have two 50Hz horns to move in with you... what criteria you used, besides the obvious, in your real-estate research?..." 
  
Criteria :
1) Main room minimum 80m2 with correct length-to-width ratio
2) No mid-room obstructions (no poles, columns, or other supports)
3) Absence of street noise
3) Ground floor

That's all I dared ask for.

I spent 4 or 5 months trying to find such a place, but in Paris, large spaces are often divided up into small spaces in the interest of maximizing financial gain. I was under pressure, and ended up settling for a place that's far from ideal. There's plenty of square feet, but the length-to-width ratio of the main room is not right (too long and narrow). It does however allow me to continue working, and I look at it more as a work space than a listening room.  
 
I can position the large horns (which are in fact 40Hz horns) only if willing to accept toeing them in way more than I'd like.
 
Once they are done, and as soon as the auto industry pulls its self up (its my day job), I'll be looking to move on. It would be nice to see Detroit come back to life, as real estate there is extremely reasonable right now...

I look at this audio thing as something that takes time, and I'm OK with that as long as I don't go wasting any of it. It has taken time, but I feel I've moved relatively efficiently; in any case, this is not a passing interest, and as such, its impossible to over-invest. I do however need to get the project done while there's still time left in life to sit down and properly use it!

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-23-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,159
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 146
Post ID: 11156
Reply to: 11155
Yep, the real-estate sucks for audio freaks.
fiogf49gjkf0d

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
So it sounds like you're considering a move...

Yep, I am contemplating this now…

 jessie.dazzle wrote:

Criteria :
1) Main room minimum 80m2 with correct length-to-width ratio
2) No mid-room obstructions (no poles, columns, or other supports)
3) Absence of street noise
3) Ground floor

That's all I dared ask for.

Yes, I have in way similar criteria. 1 sq meter = 10.8 sq feet, so you are talking about approximately 900-1000 sq feet.  Of a single room. That is pretty much the dimension that I am looking for. A minor thing that the rooms (lofts) of this size frequently comes in Boston with 43-50 foot ceilings.  This might be a bitch as it is extremely difficult to make such rooms to work well. You need a lot of power and anal or of exertion to feel such a volume with bass and we are vey beyond the SET capacity to do this. I would rather prefer to have moderate 15 foot ceilings.

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
I spent 4 or 5 months trying to find such a place, but in Paris, large spaces are often divided up into small spaces in the interest of maximizing financial gain.

Yes, the same is in Boston but I am considering buying not renting so I perfectly intend to tear down the walls… I hate the compartmentalized rooms and dummy corridors as well.
 

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
I can position the large horns (which are in fact 40Hz horns) only if willing to accept toeing them in way more than I'd like.

Well, I was conserving to leave a part of the 40Hz horn outside of the walls… anyhow, the subject of real-estate and the bass horn is kind of funny and I think it very well might deserve own dedicated thread.

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
    I look at this audio thing as something that takes time, and I'm OK with that as long as I don't go wasting any of it. It has taken time, but I feel I've moved relatively efficiently; in any case, this is not a passing interest, and as such, its impossible to over-invest. I do however need to get the project done while there's still time left in life to sit down and properly use it!

Well, you do not need to tell me about it. Anyhow, what I see is that my audio demands for real-estate are WAY more ugly them my out of audio demands for home. The last thing would be looking proportion with reverberation time tester and specter analyzer.  Unfortunately with my consulting occupation I need to be in specific area…. That adds insult to injury….

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
07-23-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,159
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 147
Post ID: 11157
Reply to: 11156
A listening room for Salvador Dali?
fiogf49gjkf0d
BTW, purely hypothetically, Jessie, if you have a long harrow room then did you consider to put your bass horns vertically, facing them mouth up, pretending that they are large vases? It might be a new kinky surreal home decor and you can make the things hang from the edge of the mouths like some kind of odd chandeliers…. The jungle plants and monkeys come to my mind…. :-)

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
07-23-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 148
Post ID: 11161
Reply to: 11157
The great affair is to move
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy wrote :

"...BTW, purely hypothetically, Jessie, if you have a long harrow room then did you consider to put your bass horns vertically, facing them mouth up, pretending that they are large vases? It might be a new kinky surreal home decor and you can make the things hang from the edge of the mouths like some kind of odd chandeliers…. The jungle plants and monkeys come to my mind…."

The ceilings in my current place are about 9.5ft high, so if I were to stand the large horns on end, they'd be firing immediately into a flat surface. They are designed to take advantage of a standard 8ft high ceiling (when firing toward the listener) for maximum coupling with the room, so that is what I'll be looking for.
 
Also, I'm convinced that a too-big space is horrible for audio as well as being non-conducive to good mental concentration (some of the best ideas are born on the toilet!) 
 
Those Boston lofts may require lowering the ceiling/adding a second level. Quite easy to do if you keep with an "industrial" theme. 

"...my audio demands for real-estate are WAY more ugly them my out of audio demands for home..."
 
I have almost no "normal living requirements"... Give me a non-preformatted space and somewhere to fire up the barbeque and I'll be just fine. Ideally, I'd buy a bare piece of land, pour a slab, and build a place from cinder blocks (maybe Paul could start a side business cranking out these little churches!).
 
Robert Louis Stevenson wrote :
"...I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel's sake. The great affair is to move..."

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-23-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,159
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 149
Post ID: 11162
Reply to: 11161
I like and I don’t
fiogf49gjkf0d

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
   Also, I'm convinced that a too-big space is horrible for audio as well as being non-conducive to good mental concentration (some of the best ideas are born on the toilet!)

The subject of playback in very large rooms is a separate subject and to get a proper sound in there it requires very different technique then we are familiar in high-end audio. I tend to agree that in I do not like very big rooms but I never have seen a right attempts to properly sound re-enforce a very large closed listening space.
 

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
   Those Boston lofts may require lowering the ceiling/adding a second level. Quite easy to do if you keep with an "industrial" theme.

Actually it not a bad idea at all….. I never thought about it, I probably shall…

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
    
I have almost no "normal living requirements"... Give me a non-preformatted space and somewhere to fire up the barbeque and I'll be just fine. Ideally, ….

I do have "normal living requirements" but they are very integrated with my audio habits.  I like when my audio is sitting in the middle of room where I live, I like to take my t-short from washer machine and hang it to dry on my horn overnight, I like when my Cat warms up her ass atop on my amplifiers, I like when women are hissing when I pay more attention for cleaning of my records then to compliment their make up or their hair color change, I in a way like when women get very angry because I remember Rachmaninoff birthday but “forget” my anniversary with them, I like do not go somewhere when I would like to hear what I would like to hear…. Well, lately those anniversary become shorter and shorter, I wonder why…  :-)

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
09-17-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 150
Post ID: 11768
Reply to: 11162
Voice coils & horn loading : Electrical restance + Physical load
fiogf49gjkf0d
I'm picking this up from the "Living Voice Loudspeaker" thread 
http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?PageIndex=2&postID=11765#11765
and placing it here, as further discussion will take us off the original thread :

Romy wrote :
"...I remember it was very auditable when I was experimenting with Fane Studio 8 of 8R and 16R. I had both and most of those drivers come as 8R. I remember the custom party I ordered from Fane was 16R version..."

If you've tried both, and decided to keep the 16R versions, you've answered a question I've had for quite a while; I too use the 16R version, but have always wanted to try a pair of 8Ms with 8 Ohm coils (should have ordered them back when Fane were still in business!), just for the sake of comparison when used in a 115Hz horn.

Sort of on the same subject: I edited the last post I left back in the Living Voice thread; if you've not already done so, it would be interesting if you could comment on my assumption that Vitavox specified a lower R version of their 15" bass drivers in anticipation of the additional load (seen by an amplifier) once the driver is mated to a horn. It seems inevitable that additional physical load would translate into additional R as seen by the amp. Never mind that its likely no commercialized implementation of this driver loaded it to such an extent as to require the lower resistance winding.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
09-17-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,159
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 151
Post ID: 11769
Reply to: 11768
Then vs. now.
fiogf49gjkf0d

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
If you've tried both, and decided to keep the 16R versions, you've answered a question I've had for quite a while; I too use the 16R version, but have always wanted to try a pair of 8Ms with 8 Ohm coils (should have ordered them back when Fane were still in business!), just for the sake of comparison when used in a 115Hz horn.

Well, you need to understand that my decisions to go for 16R Fane in 2000 were mostly argon decibels. Since at that time I was driving everything from the same amps I was concern that my upperbass horn would have the similar output with my MF horn. The Fane Studio 8 was born as a replacement of the default driver in the Avantgarde upperbass horn. I got the 8R initially and it was a few db lauder then my MF channels (I use many-many MF driver at that time for MF, including the AG own MF driver). So to EQ the things I do not use voltage dropping in crossover but I drove the different channels from different taps of my ML2. Then I went for 16R version Fane. When later on I when to DSET then the impedance of the drivers lost any significant as it always might be tuned by transformer ration. 

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
Sort of on the same subject: I edited the last post I left back in the Living Voice thread; if you've not already done so, it would be interesting if you could comment on my assumption that Vitavox specified a lower R version of their 15" bass drivers in anticipation of the additional load (seen by an amplifier) once the driver is mated to a horn. It seems inevitable that additional physical load would translate into additional R as seen by the amp. Never mind that its likely no commercialized implementation of this driver loaded it to such an extent as to require the lower resistance winding.

Might be, it is hard to speculate. To do it I think it needs to be known how Vitavox intend to drive those speakers and this is the information that I do not have. I have seen a few SS Vitavox amps but never tube amps. I do not know if Vitavox was in tube amps business and I have no idea what amplification they uses in 50s and 60s for sound re-enforcement.  Those sound re-enforcement requires a lot of power – most likely they uses SS amps. I know Pink Floyd used S2 drivers and it was all SS amplification I guess. Still, I feel that in our home utilization we all those drivers to much, much, much more sophisticated degree that they even meant to be used. So, I recognize what they did back then and what their objective were as very much raw material and I do not take their initial intentions too serious.

The Cat

PS: Jessie said: I edited the last post I left back in the Living Voice thread; if you've not already done so.
I do not edit the posts of others; I just in some cases (if it's too much) remove the extra break lines after the end of the posts.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
09-17-2009 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 152
Post ID: 11771
Reply to: 11769
Post edit
fiogf49gjkf0d

Romy wrote :
"...I do not edit the posts of others..."

I think you misunderstood my post (my fault; I was not very clear)... I meant to say that I had edited my own post, and was asking for your comment in the event you had not already made one while I was writing the new post here in this thread.

Thanks for answering.

jd*

Btw, I usually have to edit my posts a few times to get colors and font variations to "stick".




How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
01-09-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 153
Post ID: 12651
Reply to: 11771
Balancing amplitude between drivers/horns
fiogf49gjkf0d
A little update :
 
Reading some recent comments in the "Configuration from Italy" thread:
http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?postID=12605#12605 
prompted me to share what I've recently done. Yes its an obvious thing to do, but it took me a year before finally getting off my butt to try it. I'm now very much appreciating the results.
 
As previously mentioned, and as per Romy's recommendation, I added L-Pad attenuators to the lower-mid channels. Having the ability to roll off the output from these channels was definitely a good thing, and lead me to the following experiment. 
 
The situation I wanted to address:
The upper-bass channels in my system (16R Fane Studio 8M into 115Hz Tractrix) have less output than all other channels, and, though the system is bi-amped, the second pair of amps is used only to drive the extreme lower-bass channels; everything else is driven from a single pair of amps. As these amps are not DSET, up to this point I had been balancing the amplitude between channels as well as possible, by driving them from different taps, and in the case of the lower-mid, by adjusting the above-mentioned attenuators. 
 
So, I decided to try adding attenuators to all channels, with the exception of the upper-base. Below are my objectives:
 
1) Possibility to individually balance (with precision) the amplitude between all upper-range channels, while driving them from the taps that sound best. 
 
2) Possibility to bring the amplitude of the upper-range channels as a group, down to match that of the upper-bass horns.
 
The extreme lower-bass channels have always been adjustable for amplitude, meaning that now the output of all channels can be brought down to match that of the weakest channels, which as mentioned, in my case is the upper-bass.
 
The most obvious result is that the upper-bass horns are now contributing a lot more; all I can say is that this contribution is very welcome. The other big thing is a very finely adjustable upper range.

Since then, I've really been enjoying the system, and am more impatient than ever to get the large mid-bass horns done (I've had to put them on hold in order to keep my day job with what's left of the automotive industry... Where's that guy who once accused us of being out of touch because we didn't have to toil like real people who all have day jobs!).
 
Once the large mid-bass horns are done, I will likely add an additional pair of attenuators to either these new horns, or to the upper-bass horns; those with the strongest output will get the attenuators, once again bringing everything in line with the least sensitive of the channels; reminds me of what I have to do to myself every time I leave the house.

What I don't like: I don't like the idea of burning excess sensitivity; the alternative to this is of course DSET. 
 
jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
01-09-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,159
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 154
Post ID: 12653
Reply to: 12651
A few random comments.
fiogf49gjkf0d
First of all we need all to understand that all channels attenuators need only for setting up phase of playback live. When the installations are set up properly then it is all not necessary.

Anyhow, if the upperbass has less output then you might use Fane Studio 8M with 8R voice coil and it will give you extra 3dB. Be also advised that when you balancing the amplitude between channels driving them from different taps then you change the loading of tube. So, dropping upperbass from 8R tap to 16R tap you will change loading to your MF canal that is driven from own tap. You might also for pick up 3-6dB of upperbass by dropping the reference of you MF channel – driving MF from 4R and driving upperbass from 16R. Mind you that we are taking about volumes, the loading for individual channel will be obviously screwed.

Adding attenuators is not so painless. For LF channels is obliterate leading edge of bass and for HF channels it rolls off HF on the attenuator’s inductance. For HF you might use the trick that I uses with my MF DSET where I put an attenuator in secondary. Still, if you do not use different tube then I would not use attenuator for MF.

Here is what I feel makes sense. The main bass and many MF channels shall not have any attenuators. The volume of those channels is permanently set as the described by the dimension of the room. This is the bone of the sound. The channels between – the Upperbass and Fundamental might be adjustable. I did not live with Midbass and Upperbass channels and my Upperbass is fixed. However, I have my own way to play with it, in fact I did in past I found the right configuration. If you remember I have Injection channel with 10” Red that in my box goes down 50Hz or so. So, sliding the bottom knee high-pass filter on the Injection channel I can add midbass output from Injection channel that would help to my Upperbass. The fact that Upperbass is on the floor and Injection channel near sealing is very helpful for the whole integration.

Generally what I detect that soon or later, having a control over all of it, one develops a sense how the Upperbass channels with MF channels need to be balanced and it is never an ambiguity.  How to feel the space between then is a bit trickier and that does requires an adjustment for fine setup. Talking about the adjustment for channels out you shall not forget that if you stupid enough to do for DSET configuration then it will be more pain in ass as tubes will be losing gain with time. And you would need to deal with 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
01-09-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,658
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 155
Post ID: 12654
Reply to: 12651
Burning Sensitivity
fiogf49gjkf0d

Jessie, your post catches me thinking about multi-channel driver matching, as well.  I am not familiar with the Fanes, but I wonder if simply throwing more power at them would make them nothing more than louder, so they would then "match" the rest of the system, irrespective of their "native efficiency".  I guess it's a matter of how much difference we're talking, here, but I've noticed over the years that drivers with differing efficiencies typically sound different, in terms of character, if nothing else.  Let's use LF as an obvious example.  One way or another, LF usually requires more power to "match up" in terms of SPL.  And I think that, if we are honest, where we actually find LF, then "servo bass" winds up more or less "attached" to the rest of the spectrum rather than a "natural" continuation.  Conversly, the "best LF" in terms of character generally seems to be the bass that best matches up with the rest of the sytem.  Don't get me wrong; I have heard some truly astounding "bass" coming from "pro" installations burning crazy amounts of power. At the same time, this has never been anything I'd want in my home.

Sorry to put this mostly in terms of LF.  LF is just an extreme - and obvious -  example of what I'm talking about.  The question is actually about level matching and final balancing in a multi-channel system.  It's hard to argue with DSET, for any number of reasons.  But I wonder how far the idea will stretch to cover channel-to-channel efficiency "mis-matches".

My own mental "modeling" these days - spurred by JLH's posts on the "tapped horns" - is tending to use multiple drivers for each frequency range of each channel.  This seems - potentially - to offer the multiple "benefits" of "oops loading" and added efficiency.

Anyway, lots of self-reflective words to ask generally about efficiency versus character in multi-driver HE speakers.

Best regards,
Paul S

01-10-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 156
Post ID: 12659
Reply to: 12653
Balancing act; Act II
fiogf49gjkf0d
First: Anyone with a pair of 8 Ohm Fane Studio 8Ms for sale may contact me (contact info available by clicking on my user name in the blue column on the left of the page).

In answer to Romy's comments:
I agree that there is a deterioration in sound quality which seems proportional to the amount of attenuation used; I was not using a lot.
 
I say was because last night I bypassed all attenuators and sat down to compare. I hadn't heard the system without attenuators for about a month. Yes it is more alive with no attenuation, and good recordings sound wonderful. Dynamically compressed recordings sound horrible.
 
Some time this summer, in the name of education, I started an experiment on myself; for 3 months straight, I listened to nothing but classical recordings. Then, for the past two months, everything other than classical. The fact that non-classical recordings are often more dynamically compressed, may explain my liking the effect of the attenuators; I was, for the first time, able to listen to, and appreciate the material on dynamically compressed recordings.

The root of what prompted me to experiment with attenuation, is in fact the system's absence of real mid-bass; it currently produces only "fake" mid-bass. "Faking" is achieved by running the extreme lower-bass units up into mid-bass territory, while running the upper-bass horns as low as they'll go. There solution does not completely fill the "hole". The addition of the 40Hz bass horns will solve this issue.
 
As for balancing the amplitude between channels by driving them from different taps: I drive the upper bass horns form the 16 Ohm taps, and everything else from the 8 Ohm taps. An 8 Ohm versoin of the upper-bass drivers would allow driving everything from one pair of taps, which would be ideal. I did try using the 4 Ohm taps to drive the S2s; they did not respond well. 
 
In response to Paul's comment regarding the possibility the upper-bass drivers might benefit from more power: I could easily try this (using the amps that currently drive the extreme lower-bass units), but given the sensitivity of the drivers, they shouldn't need it... They are simply a bit less sensitive than the super sensitive S2s. What might be interesting would be to drive them via their own amps putting an attenuator inline ahead of the amps that drive the mid an upper range horns. I could imagine running the 40Hz horns from this same additional pair of amps. If results were good, it would mean finding a way to drive 3 pairs of amps from a single preamp; I see no easy way to do this with my current preamp.
 
Conclusion: I need to get busy and finish the 40Hz horns.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
01-10-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,159
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 157
Post ID: 12663
Reply to: 12659
The upperbass is very important
fiogf49gjkf0d

 jessie.dazzle wrote:
As for balancing the amplitude between channels by driving them from different taps: I drive the upper bass horns form the 16 Ohm taps, and everything else from the 8 Ohm taps. An 8 Ohm versoin of the upper-bass drivers would allow driving everything from one pair of taps, which would be ideal. I did try using the 4 Ohm taps to drive the S2s; they did not respond well.

If you drop everything to 4R tap then your upperbass horns from 16R tap will have extra 3dB. I did not problem driving S2 from 4R tap – in fact this was the only operation mode I like with ML2. You need plastic suspended diaphragm to do it. The 16R tap… It heavily loads the out tube and I do not like it. It might make bass inappropriately bloomy and muddy.

What you report is sagest that you have very room. Your upperbass with 16R driver in 115Hz Tratrix and S2 with plastic suspension at 400Hz Tratrix has the very same sensitivity – 109dB from 1W.  You run upperbass loaded twice harder it made you have to have 3dB more at upperbass. Apparently your room is large enough and you listening and radiating locations are not “active” enough in the room that you are losing some DBs. Yes, what you finish you midbass horn you will be able to run it along with upperbass and it would help. Still, I would make the upperbass to work properly. The upperbass horn in your configuration is VERY important for imaging of the whole system – it grounds the whole system imaging-wise. Make an experiment: play a piano concerto and set one upperbass 2dB different then another upperbass, with other channels equal. You will see that the whole presentation will sound VERY strange…

What I would do if I were you is to take any cheap amp for test and to run the upperbass from. You will see how your playback sounds when the upperbass is sufficient from your room. Then you will be able to make a conclusion if and how much you need to boost your upperbass.

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
01-11-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
ayebee
Posts 13
Joined on 06-03-2005

Post #: 158
Post ID: 12672
Reply to: 12659
Adjust crossover-values?
fiogf49gjkf0d
Hi Jessie!

I’m probably suggesting the obvious, but have you tried adjusting the crossover component values on the fundamentals and MF-channels? On the fundamentals-channel, increasing the inductor-value, and decreasing the cap, so that the slopes cross on the same frequency, but in a lower amplitude, could be one way to decrease the sensitivity without resorting to resistive attenuators.

The same could *perhaps* be applied on the MF-channel as well. When I changed the driver in my upper-bass horn, I could increase the cap on my JBL 2420 MF-driver from 3 (if I remember correctly) to 3.3 uF to match the increased sensitivity. This change actually affected sensitivity of the MF-channel more than it did affect tonality.

Of course, this is just another way to burn sensitivity, so that particular headache is still not cured.

Could you perhaps post a schematic of your current crossover?

/Anders

01-11-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,159
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 159
Post ID: 12673
Reply to: 12672
Playing with crossover values and Fundamentals Channel
fiogf49gjkf0d

 ayebee wrote:

I’m probably suggesting the obvious, but have you tried adjusting the crossover component values on the fundamentals and MF-channels? On the fundamentals-channel, increasing the inductor-value, and decreasing the cap, so that the slopes cross on the same frequency, but in a lower amplitude, could be one way to decrease the sensitivity without resorting to resistive attenuators.

The same could *perhaps* be applied on the MF-channel as well. When I changed the driver in my upper-bass horn, I could increase the cap on my JBL 2420 MF-driver from 3 (if I remember correctly) to 3.3 uF to match the increased sensitivity. This change actually affected sensitivity of the MF-channel more than it did affect tonality.

Of course, this is just another way to burn sensitivity, so that particular headache is still not cured.

Could you perhaps post a schematic of your current crossover?


Anders, yes and no. You need to be careful playing those games. First of all adjusting the sensitive via crossover works only what the driver sit on transition slope. It means that driver does not operate in a horizontal section of response.  Let take foe instance your JBL 2420. It you use it from let say 7kHz and up with first order then you might to a degree adjust the sensitivity of the channel by moving it higher or lower on the slop. However, if you have your JBL 2420 sitting at 1000Hz or 500Hz then you have no such option as you need your driver to demonstrate linear sensitivity from 500hz to 12KHz.

The adjustment sensitivity by crossover would work on tweeter or on the bass channels if they do not work very wide. It would work technically very well on the Fundamentals Channel if it has a very narrow bandwidth, however, I would not advise to use the crossovering method for Fundamentals Channel. You see, the Fundamentals Channel sets the scale of the MF weigh. It is hard to explain you need to play with it - when you add and reduce the Fundamentals Channel’s output then you moderate the body size the instruments resonators, you can set their perceptual speed and their “seriousness”, you can moderate the level of musical legato of enter presentation and you can tight the upper channels with bass channels to a very high level of “accuracy”. I use “accuracy” in quotes as it is not the “accuracy” per say but rather your perception of “how it shall be”. There is a kink in it though. When you are setting up your Fundamentals Channel via non-inductive volume controls then you change only the Channel’s output. However, if you do not use volume controls but move the channel up and down on the transition slope via crossover then with each change of filter you introduce new phase characteristics and you need to do time re-alignment at each new volume level. The bitch is that when you re-align time then you get new amplitude. You then kill another .5dB of amplitude and then you need to re-align time…It might be a bit pain in ass to do.

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
01-11-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
ayebee
Posts 13
Joined on 06-03-2005

Post #: 160
Post ID: 12675
Reply to: 12673
I agree, but YMMV
fiogf49gjkf0d
Yes, I agree. If the output of the fundamentals-channel is controlled via the slopes in the crossover, the opportunity to set the output on a recording-to-recording basis is lost. If one, however, has the output of the fundamentals-channel fixed, then my suggestion wouldn’t be equally faulty. In your system context I know this is a very important feature (maybe even the very idea of the channels existence?), so it depends on the purpose of this channel, I guess.

I also understand your argumentation on why adjusting MF-sensitivity via the high-pass cap is not recommendable, but I guess this also comes down to the responce of the specific driver/horn combination, and the level of sophistication that one has achieved with the present setup. If you’re 100% satisfied with your MF-response, then of course stay away from the capacitor. In my case it did subjectively work (and my very crude RTA didn’t say otherwise, but I did of course to some degree change the MF-response, although I couldn't detect it), in another case it might very well not. To change a capacitor, then measure and listen, is still a very simple procedure… Smile

/Anders

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