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| Re: 4 Pi Design Questions [message #72745 is a reply to message #64658 ] |
Thu, 17 May 2012 19:38   |
Nichol1997 Messages: 21 Registered: December 2009 Location: Virginia |
Chancellor |
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I finally got around to measuring my modified Pi4 speakers. Attached is the nearfield frequency response using Room Eq Wizard version 5.
I am still learning how to use the software and hardware so I am not sure if I am measuring it correctly. I had the mic mounted on a stand that was 16" from the baffle and just a little bit below the throat of the compression driver on the vertical.
My measurement gear consists of:
HP laptop w/ Windows XP
MobilePre USB external soundcard
Behringer ECM8000 mic
Behringer EP2500 (ran the MobilePre USB directly to the amp)
To me, the measurement makes it look like my woofers are out of phase. I only measured the right speaker. I will have to wait until it is quiet in the house again before I can measure the left speaker.
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| Re: 4 Pi Design Questions [message #72746 is a reply to message #72745 ] |
Thu, 17 May 2012 22:46   |
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Wayne Parham Messages: 15854 Registered: May 2009 |
Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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You may have the woofer or tweeter leads reversed. But redo your measurement first, because measurements made like you are doing always create notches from boundary reflections.
Lay the speaker on it's back and position the microphone one meter (or more) above it, facing the upper half of the midwoofer cone. This orientation will prevent a floor bounce notch, and it puts the microphone in the center of the forward lobe. You can usually get away with indoors measurements when done this way, if all you care about is response in the crossover region, but you'll have no visibility below a few hundred Hertz. It will be peaky if ungated, or meaningless if gated. Of course, it never hurts to take the speakers outdoors, which is truly anechoic. You'll still want to lay the speaker on it's back, or you can put the microphone on the ground and angle the speaker down to face it.
This is what you should expect to see, measurements from two different people using two different measurement systems:
I realize your speaker is a modded version, but if the only difference is box size, then I would expect most changes to be below 200Hz. So setup your measurement as described above, and if you don't see a chart like this, check your connections and crossover.
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