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  »  New  45Hz Bass Horn..  Can We Ever be Saved From Ourselves?...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     23  307136  09-19-2006
  »  New  8" Goto Woofer for 60Hz Horn..  It's not a Goto 8in driver...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     5  84838  11-03-2008
  »  New  The Macondo’s Upper Bass Channel: what is next?..  Görlich again...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     30  280871  10-28-2007
  »  New  Jessie Dazzle Project..  Will this better to be auditable?...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     172  1514233  08-03-2007
  »  New  Romy The Cat's new Listening Room..  Won't be the last time he makes that trip!...  Audio Discussions  Forum     478  2791781  03-28-2010
  »  New  Problems with horns: upper bass ..  Must it be about loading?...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     109  1134340  03-25-2005
  »  New  Midbass Horns and Real Estate...  Just a youtube video......  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     247  2069844  07-26-2009
  »  New  Macondo’s lowest channel...  What truly are you tryin to accomplish?...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     150  1349636  09-15-2010
  »  New  Practical Guide for Back Chambers Tuning...  Back chamber’s cost-benefit....  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     5  73209  10-21-2006
  »  New  Superbly interesting effect: Suspended decoupled floor ..  Superbly interesting effect: Suspended decoupled floor ...  Playback Listening  Forum     0  17402  10-08-2010
  »  New  Midbass impedance bumps -- why and what to do?..  You need to stop deceive yourself....  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     18  187784  10-21-2010
  »  New  Mystery of bass horn calibration: Radiating Surface Dee..  Mystery of bass horn calibration: Radiating Surface Dee...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     0  16676  02-03-2011
  »  New  Impulse response, short notes and midbass horns...  A possible solution to better impulse?...  Horn-Loaded Speakers Forum     14  123575  06-13-2011
10-02-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 341
Post ID: 14626
Reply to: 14625
Wired
fiogf49gjkf0d

Rakesh reminds us of the decision to "go long".  Romy, how much wire has been involved with the testing so far?  Very long runs often present their own problems, including similar to what you have described.  I would schlep the B2 over to the horns and at least try them with short runs before I tore anything else apart.  Feed it with a laptop if you have to.

Best regards,
Paul S

10-02-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
haralanov


Bulgaria
Posts 130
Joined on 05-20-2008

Post #: 342
Post ID: 14627
Reply to: 14619
How to localize the problem
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
It is was not bad sound but the sound that clearly indicated that something is very wrong: supper compressed, complete absent of LF, huge HF extension. The whole horn sounds like a bad MD driver.

Open the back panels of you compression chambers, remove all of the foam behind the cones and run the drivers without any acoustic resistance behind them.



"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." -A.E.
10-02-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
deemon
Posts 24
Joined on 05-25-2004

Post #: 343
Post ID: 14628
Reply to: 14619
The possible cause
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
I mean the driver from 14Hz to 150HZ gas absolutely linear impedance as it has no active load. I look at all of it and felt so tiered and I walked out if it. I think in the new room the horn is shooting into the wide open sealing and see no reflection  and all my back chamber calculation and testing the worked so great for horns in basemen is absolutely not applicable now.
Romy , if your driver behaves like resistor - it seems like something stopping it . If the motor cannot move , we'll see only active resistance of the coil - exactly what you see . Maybe your foam in the back chamber expanded in some way , and blocked the speaker cone .
10-02-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
unicon


Posts 74
Joined on 10-14-2009

Post #: 344
Post ID: 14629
Reply to: 14383
Impedance test the way you done it
fiogf49gjkf0d
 unicon wrote:
Roman, 

I suggest that you do add the mass in driver like coins in driver cone(and measure the coin weight too) and do added mass free air impedance test then you can see where it can bring another low resonance .then when it reaches 20% lower the free air you are getting the most out of your driver  .so in loaded horn you can be sure how much foam to add and having the goal impedance you can be almost sure everything is right.
and i suggest not to try more than 20% 


I really dont like the way you try it.
the sound can be heard accidentally so good and when missed cant be implemented again.

I dont wanna disappoint you but the logic used to get the resonances you wanted to hear was basically based on what you liked to hear naw you switched to testing it .
just
Try the free air test and add mass on cone and do another test and then in horn loaded then you have the clue whats happening ...
do the basic testing from start and dw what it guna sound laterz
then we can discuss the room coupling...

best regards
        unicon




10-03-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 345
Post ID: 14630
Reply to: 14629
The another day of midbass.
fiogf49gjkf0d

OK, this morning I tuned the playback and did some listing, trying to understand what was the problem. Sound was not just bad but it was very strange, it was almost as a mechanical replica of sound. I took my phase meter trying to set horns in phase with the rest of the system and I was shocked how the horns reacted to the 2+1 phase pulses. Any speakers do it like claps but my horns presented it almost as VC was rubbing the gap. Also, the midbass horn did not react to crossover properly- it output pretty much the same horribly-compressed MF sound aka a telephone from 30s….. This was no what I was signed for.

I decided to poke a small whole in back chamber on one of the horns and to see if it would impact resonance frequency. I disagree with el`Ol that the foam I use is too soft. It tested many time – this type of foam for the purpose of filling back chamber is as good as solid brick. I made a small 1-2mm hole from the driver window to outside and measured the resonance – there was no fucking resonance. I decided that foam glued the cone and the game is over- I started to cut the foam to replace the driver.

When I reached the level of fabric cover the window I realized that the fabric was not perpetrated by foam and the driver’s diaphragm was in absolutely intact virgin state. What the hell – I was asking myself. I opened one whole basket‘s window and measured the resonance frequency.  To my huge surprise I did see the resonance now. It was 54.6Hz. I need to mention that the resonance was nothing even remotely close to what I had in basement. In basement it was almost 50%, very sharp impedance dive, her in the room,  it was more like 5-10% and very smooth dive. I took foams from one more window - 52Hz. Eventually I took all non-compressible foams out of the chamber. The resonance drooped to 50Hz, or to the resonance of the driver in open air. Then I opened the back chamber lid wide open. The resonance dropped to 43.7Hz. That was already something but I needed a few more Hz, and I would like to keep the primary resonance just under 42Hz. I decided to fill the back chamber with compressible foam (furniture foam) that shall virtually expend the chamber volume. Laying the chamber with furniture foam made the resonance to rise to 47Hz. I deseeded to keep the back chamber wide open for now with 43.7Hz of primary resonance.

I reset the playback to run from generator to preamp and give it a try to play music. Here it was – the bass was as it had to be in its shine. OK, what does it all means?

The events I describe are hugely educational.  As now I understand I did wrong the size of the back chamber - it had to be as I initially thought - the 3 sizes of the driver total volume. However, disagree with the criticism that I did anything wrong. What I did was the only methods I trust in loudspeakers design -following my own empirical results.  In the middle of the thread I did tell that the reflective condition in the listening room will be different then reflective condition of the basement and the horns will “read” the walls differently.  That is why I thought to make the adjustable back chamber – to fine-tune the chamber after the horns will be installed. What I did not know and did anticipated was that the amplitude of the differences between room and basement will be so huge. The super small size of the back chamber was absolutely right for the basement location but absolutely incorrect for the room where horns see no reflections of any kind. A 50Hz driver shooting toward to wall via a horn like mine experience throat reactance that made resonance drop to 24Hz. In open air however it the drop goes to 43.7Hz. This is indication that throat reactance is not only derivative of the air mass in the belly of the horn but also hugely moderated by the reflective characteristics of the room profile.  I generally know about but I have no idea that the degree of this moderation might be near 100%.

This experience of mine give a huge room of thoughts, explanations and doubts. Generally people do not talk, do not think, and do not question it. What you can see on-line is a person make a picture of his shiny horn but no one question how the horn sound and what ingredients made it’s sound. I question everything and I expose everything in this thread. One might by $40K Goto bass driver, or some exotic bass electromagnet and feel that hell all set but did you ever see those people ever question or publish own resonance frequency of  their horns.  Without know the bass horn resonance frequency and ability to moderate it for a give location a bass horn in pretty much unturned instrument that produces absolutely accidental result. I wish that this conclusion would be a legacy of my projects.

Anyhow, it turned out the in my horn, shooting in non-reflective room pushed the Vitavox driver to it’s limit.  The 43.7Hz is a bit short but the driver has no cone mass to go lower. I would like to find a way to drop it for 3-4 Hz lower but I am hesitant to glue anything to the driver. The back chamber is open and I need to devise some kind of thermal solution to unclose the driver that would not impact the resonance.

At this point the midbass channel is more or less operate properly. It sounds fine and here is the frequency response of left Midbass after a 70Hz low pass 6dB filter.

Midbass_progress_161.jpg

I might start to work on the midbass sound and on the midbass integration with Macondo. I need to mention that Macondo since I moved to the new room did not have any proper setup done. Now I need to review the enter Macondo in context of the Midbass channels and the ULF channel. Midbass now a lot of louder then Macondo, 7R resistor set it equal but I am not sure how I will reduce the Midbass volume. I would like to do it by dropping loading of the Midbass out transformer. I think it is too early to think about it, I need to revise many other things. For whatever it worth he is the Macondo’s left channel raw initial sweep, for each channel but without the Injection Channel. It sure will be see a lot of work and will be a lot of better.

 Midbass_progress_162.jpg

Now it will be interesting time – a lot of listening and a lot of thinking, No more wood cutting and dust.  That will be in way very interesting time – to make Melquiades, Macondo and the Room to sound properly. Even as now, listening what they do, I do see a lot of potential but it for sure need to have a lot of fine polishing of sound. As my carpenter do some minor cosmetics modification this well I will put the room treatment in the game and for now I am beginning to work on new crossovers.

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
10-03-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
unicon


Posts 74
Joined on 10-14-2009

Post #: 346
Post ID: 14631
Reply to: 14630
Closed box mass is agaisnt the horn load mass
fiogf49gjkf0d
what you did in your horn :

 you coupled your horn and you added mass on cone. then imagine when the cone tried to make an impulse it moves forward and then in back chamber something stops it from moving(air pressure+-) your driver had been stopped from moving from back and horn chamber.

I suggest make you back chamber as large as you can or just make it infinite chamber like or isolate the back roof side areas.
in my idea in infinite chamber you can avoid some unwanted resonances like that  125 315 hz( if its not due to your horn mouthing sizes )

and be patients =]

regards
10-03-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 347
Post ID: 14632
Reply to: 14631
Let get some practical perspective.
fiogf49gjkf0d

 unicon wrote:
what you did in your horn :

 you coupled your horn and you added mass on cone. then imagine when the cone tried to make an impulse it moves forward and then in back chamber something stops it from moving(air pressure+-) your driver had been stopped from moving from back and horn chamber.

Yes, I did, it is a normal practice in my view how to tune back chamber. I did nothing more then follows my own guidance how it need to be done:

http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?postID=2991

 unicon wrote:
I suggest make you back chamber as large as you can or just make it infinite chamber like or isolate the back roof side areas.

Come on unicon, get some practical perspective on the subject. The measurement of the horns in semi-assembled state in the basemen was an attempt to get an APPROXIMATE back chamber size, in order to guess what to build. Of cause it would be great to make the back chamber “a large as you can or just make it infinite chamber” but when you have a carpenter who ask you what the demotion of the specific surface shall be then we need to stop operate by imaginary concepts and be very practical. The whole idea to make a test chamber that I have built and to find it’s size when the resonance frequency would be too high and too low. It is what I did and from that I intimated the back chamber size. Who knew that the reflections in the basement were so effective? I would refer you to my old post I made 3 days before we started the project:

http://www.GoodSoundClub.com/TreeItem.aspx?PostID=13990   

I very much questioned how the resonance frequency will change at floor level where I could make experiments to the cathedral ceiling level. I thought it would be 5Hz difference, but it turned out to be 22Hz difference. Well, now I know, now even you know….

 unicon wrote:
in my idea in infinite chamber you can avoid some unwanted resonances like that  125 315 hz( if its not due to your horn mouthing sizes )

Hmmmm, I do not think so. With open back I do have infinite chamber, you can’t make bigger chamber then open air. I do not think that there are any correlations between the unwanted peaks you see on horn response and anything in back chamber. The peaks are most likely are room related and has nothing to do with horns and impedance on those frequencies is dead stable (I tested it). Sure I would need to find a way to deal with the peaks and most certainly with the 100Hz suck out but it will be a very different subject and it will hardly had anything with the back chamber. BTW, my carpenter did propose me last night to add a few feet of the back chamber; the way how the back chamber was designed we did have a provision to let it to grow. I declined the offer foe now. Let see how it goes…

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
10-03-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 348
Post ID: 14633
Reply to: 13597
In search of Midbass crossover.
fiogf49gjkf0d
How lucky was I that I bough that digital crossover! I am think now how can I search for my crossover slope and find that this digital toy would make it very so much easy.  My major concern is to make sure that some frequency anomalies that I have for now shall not override my crossover point and crossover slope. With this digital toy I have run corrected response, compare it with uncorrected one and see how the channel will behave with different slope and at different crossover point.  I feel that I will end up with second order somewhere between 120 and 180 Hz but the future will show. Meanwhile I need to unpack that Velodine digital crossover, learn not to use it and find a good mono recording to test it; I have some recordings  in 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
10-03-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 349
Post ID: 14634
Reply to: 14633
Good signs
fiogf49gjkf0d
Excellent news regarding this morning's discoveries.

jd wrote:

"...Are you able to say whether the problem is due to the horn position relative to the room, or to throat diameter relative to the driver diameter?..."

Yes, a stupidly phrased question, but the original requirement for such a small rear chamber (non-existent rear chamber) had me concerned that the driver-to-throat ratio was resulting in excessive throat reactance; the new large rear chamber requirement is an indication that this is not at all the case, which I take as a good sign.

Romy wrote:

"...Now I need to review the entire Macondo in context of the Midbass channels and the ULF channel. Midbass is now a lot louder then Macondo, 7R resistor set it equal but I am not sure how I will reduce the Midbass volume. I would like to do it by dropping loading of the Midbass out transformer..."

Is this because of the way you are driving them?

When testing my one completed mid-bass horn (AK151 into 40Hz Exponential with 8" throat), and powering it from an amp that drives everything from upper bass to HF, the output was not noticeably louder than the rest of the horns. You have DSET amps and I am guessing that you ran the new horns form the outputs that once ran your direct radiating line arrays; is this the reason for the "excess" volume?

"...Meanwhile I need to unpack that Velodine digital crossover, learn how to use it and find a good mono recording to test it; I have some recordings  in my mind…"

The Velodyne SMS 1 will allow you to do just about anything, up to 200Hz.

You will need some sort of video monitor to see what's going on and to configure the device (an old computer monitor works well).

You are right to be using only mono recording to evaluate the results when using the SMS 1 (stereo operation requires a second SMS 1). Sending a stereo signal to a single SMS 1 is no problem; the resulting mono output signal can then be sent to left and right channels (left and right power amps). Obviously, if listening to stereo recordings in this mode, the output of the mid-bass horns would have greater amplitude than when fed a proper stereo signal.

Be aware that the operator's manual for the SMS 1 is not clearly written. If using amps that potentially exceed the rated power handling capacity of the AK drivers, familiarize yourself with the SMS 1  for a day while using junk drivers; the SMS 1 used in conjunction with the low-excursion, sensitive AK drivers and enough power is a potential recipe for immediate voice coil meltdown.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
10-04-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 350
Post ID: 14635
Reply to: 14634
The problems with Velodyne SMS.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 jessie.dazzle wrote:

The Velodyne SMS 1 will allow you to do just about anything, up to 200Hz. 

I was the Velodyne crossover into the game yesterday. To my surprise it not as convenient as I thought. The high pass filter is not defeatable as it was promised in sales brochure’s technical description – it only could be set to 1Hz. The setting of crossover is not a real time thing but the calibration that require to save seating and then to rebut the unit sort of speaking. This makes to use this crossover as bit cumbersome. I am sure they mint it to be used in automated mode with microphone but if I do not use auto-calibration then it is a bit inconvenient. The out to menu to external TV is also I found a bit Moronic. There is not a lot of data presented in menu and I see why they did not use the internal display – it has 3 lines that do virtually nothing. All together, even I think it will allow me to do what I want but I would prefer an old fashion real time crossover with knobs. I have a local guy who has Pioneer D23, I might borrow it from his and combine it with Velodyne parametric EQ functionality.

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
10-04-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 351
Post ID: 14636
Reply to: 14634
The upcoming recalibration of Melquiades channels
fiogf49gjkf0d
 jessie.dazzle wrote:

Is this because of the way you are driving them?

When testing my one completed mid-bass horn (AK151 into 40Hz Exponential with 8" throat), and powering it from an amp that drives everything from upper bass to HF, the output was not noticeably louder than the rest of the horns. You have DSET amps and I am guessing that you ran the new horns form the outputs that once ran your direct radiating line arrays; is this the reason for the "excess" volume?

The excess volume is something that I well expected. I dive the midbass hors from LF Milq DSET, the one that I used for direct radiating line arrays. This Milq’s cha has no attention of any kind and runs full open. Calibration of the rest Melquiades channels was done in respect to sensitively of lower sensitivity channels, in my case it was bass towers. Now my midbass is around 109dB sensitively and it does not need as much gain, I think the lowers volume I am getting now from Upperbass channel. The HF has around 5dB reserve; the MF is about 1-3dB (necessary since I run in there DHT).The upperbass is now weakest channel and frankly I would love to have extra 2-3dB out of it in new much larger room.

If to look at the “B” channel of the Melquiades circuit:

http://www.romythecat.com/Site_Images/6-Chennal_Melquiades_DSET_Amplifier_Rev3.jpg

then you will see 30K series resistor and 12.1K to the ground rough at the entrance of the upperbass channel. This is a voltage divider that attenuated my upperbass as it was sitting at VERY hot spots of my former room. Rising up or getting rid of the 12.1K resistor to ground I shall be able to get my few decibels of upperbass that will EQ upperbass what it need to be will set some focus to the upperbass in-front  localization. I also consider running it as bit higher then 500Hz as I have some response dip at 550Hz – I need to find out where it comes from.

Anyhow, it will be a lot of crossovers fine-tuning for next upcoming weeks. The main things that I need to deal with will be the 100Hz and 56Hz suck outs in midbass horns. Sure I will not be using the RELF resonators.  I think I would need to position or reposition some in the room to address it. The suck outs in not too nasty – juts 6dB and in a very narrow bandwidth. Let see if I will be able to smooth them out. Everything else it seems like I will have no problems to control…

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
10-04-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


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

Post #: 352
Post ID: 14638
Reply to: 14635
Ouch!... More please!
fiogf49gjkf0d
Yes, the SMS 1 (Sado-Maso-System 1), as its name implies, has a user interface conceived by someone who "comes from the other side"... It is rivaled in inconvenience only by Yamaha's synthesizers and France's parking lots.

However, once you "submit", the SMS 1 will give you a quick idea of what you can expect from these horns in their final setup.

You might need to live with their sound (and the sound from the rest of the system in the new room) for a while before knowing exactly how to integrate them. Because living with them means listening in stereo, it might be worth considering getting a second SMS 1.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
10-04-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 353
Post ID: 14643
Reply to: 14629
The first thing first.
fiogf49gjkf0d
The very fist thing I need to do to setup my midbass channel is to set my upperbass channel properly. In this larger room and sitting in the middle of the room the upperbass is way under and it need to be boosted up and it’s upper range I feel need to be extended.  So, I modify the Milq’s upperbass channels to have extra 5db output (it has near 12dB attenuator) and I lift the upper knee for extra 200Hz.

Midbass_progress_163.jpg




"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
10-04-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
skushino
Seattle, WA
Posts 93
Joined on 07-07-2004

Post #: 354
Post ID: 14644
Reply to: 14643
Upper bass HP filter
fiogf49gjkf0d
Have you considered the opportunity of raising your upper bass HP crossover?  How high do you plan to use your mid bass horns?  If your mid bass is comfortable playing up to 280hz (or whatever the right freq is), you can use your upper bass horn to play more conservatively, without trying to push it so hard for maximum amount of bass output.  You can use your upper bass more like a midrange horn, with a comfortable margin underneath.  When the upper bass was the lowest horn in Macondo, it had to be pushed.  Now with the big horns for carrying the load of your low channels, it should be an opportunity for the upper bass horns to be used differently.
10-04-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 355
Post ID: 14645
Reply to: 14643
Wipe Out
fiogf49gjkf0d
Romy, what is the un-labeled "box with dots" before the grid?

Does the wiper track well enough near the top, and will this give you enough slack, to just use total R it as it is?

Best regards,
Paul S
10-05-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 356
Post ID: 14650
Reply to: 14645
The midbass first.
fiogf49gjkf0d
 skushino wrote:
Have you considered the opportunity of raising your upper bass HP crossover?  How high do you plan to use your mid bass horns?  If your mid bass is comfortable playing up to 280hz (or whatever the right freq is), you can use your upper bass horn to play more conservatively, without trying to push it so hard for maximum amount of bass output.  You can use your upper bass more like a midrange horn, with a comfortable margin underneath.  When the upper bass was the lowest horn in Macondo, it had to be pushed.  Now with the big horns for carrying the load of your low channels, it should be an opportunity for the upper bass horns to be used differently.

Scott, this all will be decided during my experiments the coming days.  I have many ideas how it might be done but let see what will stick to the wall. Still, the first thing I think it to setting up the output of MF and upperbass equal, to make the upperbass and MF to work properly together, then to set a proper operation of Fundamental channel and only THEN to think how to match midbass to it. Without a proper setting up of upperbass there in no way to look for a reasonable midbass upper knee. Do not forget the I did not do anything with upperbass since I move to the new place and I knew that my upperbass dod not has as much room gain as it has in my old home.
 Paul S wrote:
Romy, what is the un-labeled "box with dots" before the grid?

Does the wiper track well enough near the top, and will this give you enough slack, to just use total R it as it is?

I do not know what wiper you are talking about. The "box with dots" before the grid are something so-called “grid stoppers”. The 6E5P is very fast tube and as anti-oscillation measures before the grip pit I use a bid of ferrite.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
10-05-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 357
Post ID: 14661
Reply to: 14643
The fascinating time
fiogf49gjkf0d
Now I have been listening the different crossovers trying to shape the new Macondo general balance. This is so fascinating ceremony that I do have a lot of fan.  The things doing alone very well. I boosted upper bass and it worked now very-very well. It took a bit adjustment and I ended up with 20K to 18K deviser and a .022 cap to ground.  Midbass now at the same level as MF and I ran my DHT MF with no attenuation in secondary. This is a bit bold move but I chose to do it. The most fascination is with the midbass horn. To my huge surprise and pleasure my midbass horn has absolutely no honk. I heard bass honk in ANY, even the best midbass horns that I heard (BTW, some honk does not bothers me and I even consider it desirable). The key of cause was to find a right low pass filter for midbass horns. It took pretty much an hour with SMS crossover. The leading idea is to run at 107Hz with second order and in phase.  The 3rd order at 125Hz doe as well but I begin to have problem with time alignment.
 
The elevated back position of the horn is not a problem at all what is a problem is an arrival alignment. I did not expect it.  Before I was able to move my chair all the way from the mid of the room to the wall and I had no problem. Now I have a relatively narrow window of the locations for my listening chair where the time arrival from midbass and the rest of the system is work out for me. A foot or two delays are well detectable. One might say that it is just 1-2ms and it shall not be a big deal. I do not know what a big deal means – I can hear the effect and I do not like when it delayed, though I do admit that it is not heard in all music. I do not know if the 107Hz, second order will be my last chose but so far it looks like it is good.

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
10-06-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 358
Post ID: 14663
Reply to: 14661
The Primary Resonance dilemma.
fiogf49gjkf0d

OK, as now, I see no problem to conclude to the project successfully in 1-2 weeks. The horn give much less problem then was expected, as my progress with crossover going on the midbass horns sound more and more disciplinized. Today I will be exploring the option to roll off the upperbass lower end vs. extending the midbass upper end. The crossover I use is not too comfortable for those tasks but I will survive it.

There is one aspect that at this point is not resoled and I would need to deal somehow. I do not have a position how to proceed at this point so, I will lay out all options. The problem is that my Vitavox 15 driver has too light cone/too strong suspension for this type of horn. The current setting has 43.7Hz of primary resonance. To keep everything as I understand it perfect I would like to have 35-40Hz primary resonance and then to lock it at 42 Hz with large a back chamber. With 43.7Hz I have no spare Hz to close up the back of the horn. So, here is the options I have how I might deal with the problem.

1)  Leave it as is. The 43.7Hz is near OK primary resonance for these horns. If I built a very large fiberglass-made sarcofague around the back end of the horns then I might be OK to keep horns unclosed from behind. This is what I am doing for now.

2)  Find another driver with free air primary resonance of near 40Hz. Possible and I can always do it in future.

3)   To glue to the driver some mass to drive the primary resonance down. This is not brainer was to do it but I have no collage how it will affect the driver sound. I am sure the motor will handle it but to impact the driver paper is a bit dangers. Also if I do it then what material and what techniques to use.

4)   Soften the driver suspension by soaking the outer spider with minerals. Again, it might fuck up the driver, not to mention that it will be stiffening back with time goes by

5)  Introducing artificial impediments in the mouth or near the mouth that would reflect a part of the horn pressure back to the horn belly and introduce more aggressive throat reactance. This will drive the primary resonance down but it might also modify the sound of the horn.

6)  Trying to change loading of output tube of the amp the drives the midbass horns. Currently the 6C33C is load to 1500R with midbass horns. I wonder if change of loading will slightly alter the primary resonance

If anyhow know any other ways to drop primary resonance then, please, advise.

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
10-06-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 359
Post ID: 14664
Reply to: 14661
Midbass nasal sound
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:
To my huge surprise and pleasure my midbass horn has absolutely no honk. I heard bass honk in ANY, even the best midbass horns that I heard (BTW, some honk does not bothers me and I even consider it desirable).

 The subject of midbass nasal sound is very interesting. In addition to all OTHER aspects that might lead to midbass honk I would like to note that there is one that is in my view greatly overlooked – the precision of response. What I said that my new midbass horn has absolutely no honk then it does not mean that it has no nasal artifact under any condition. If I drive the horn in wrong frequency range and at worn volume then it will have all possible problem. What I do say is that when I very fine tune the horn in respect to my other channel and make the horn to operate in the mode that I would call “proper balance”, then the horn does not exposit any sights of nasal tone. I kind of even miss this very fine honk as I do like it. Live sound has it as well, and a very fine touch of it from horn is something that I like. My horn does not have it or perhaps I need to drive it a .25dB harder somewhere, I just do not know at this point where. His is what I am learning nowadays.

The absolutely biggest surprise that I got last night was that my new midbass horn sounds a lot like bass towers in my old room. It even a bit sad that so much efforts went into those damn horns and I pretty much ended up where I was before. Sure the bass towers did not work at all in new much large room; still I would like to feel that midbass horn ahs have some advantages. There is a great temptation to drive my midbass horn a bit harder, to show itself off. My observation that ANY SINGLE midbass horn that I heard did run a bit louder than it had to be. What I run my horn a bit louder (1/2dB-1dB) then I do have VERY impressive horn sound but it is not the sound that I would like to set up. Running the horn absolutely flat makes the midbass do not show it off, or show off ONLY when music is called upon. I am still debating where would be the perfect setting for midbass. I would like to have midbass clandestine but with some very fine touch of nasal infliction. It is very had to set it as at the frequencies that I am talking about a foot or two moving across the room means a db or two of change. So, the perfect balance might be set only for one single spot of the room.

I think the very final setting of midbass will be after I pit the lower bass in play. I might do it is a day or two to see how it will work all together. 

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
10-06-2010 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


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

Post #: 360
Post ID: 14666
Reply to: 14643
A new good configuration.
fiogf49gjkf0d

I think I did find a NEW very good configuration and the one Milq has the crossover modified to reflect the new layout. It very much migh be that it will not be the last one.

Midbass_progress_164.jpg


 


"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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