Home » Audio » Speaker » Benefits of a wideband driver for off axis decay
Benefits of a wideband driver for off axis decay [message #21318] Wed, 05 October 2005 16:21 Go to next message
akhilesh is currently offline  akhilesh
Messages: 1275
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
Hi Everyone,
I was reading an article in Sensible Sound in which they review the new Bang & Olufsen Beo lab 5 (yes this is apparently totally different from the usual schlock B&O produces).
In that they talk about the importance of off-axis frequency decay, and how its important for things like imaging and spaciousness.

This got me thinking of the following question:
What do we think a wide band driver would do? Usually, it leads to beaming, so there are some frequencies over which it will offer less decay than others. In other words, a driver that goes from say 100 to 5000 Hz, and is around 8" will beam around 1500 Hz plus, and the beaming effect will get more pronounced I think as the frequency increases. How would this impact the frequency rolloff off axis? IS a wide band driver a good thing or a bad thing , from the perspective of off axis frequency roll off patterns?
-akhilesh

Re: Benefits of a wideband driver for off axis decay [message #21319 is a reply to message #21318] Wed, 05 October 2005 17:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18789
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

Controlled directivity is desireable because you can reduce early reflections by directing the sound so it doesn't bounce off nearby walls. Constant directivity is desireable because it makes the reverberent field uniformly charged. Next best thing is uniformly collapsing DI. A single driver is a direct radiator, so low frequencies are nearly omnidirectional, but the pattern gets more and more narrow as frequency rises. The reverberent field will have less HF energy as a result, but at least early reflections of HF will be reduced and there will no abrupt transitions of directivity.


Re: Benefits of a wideband driver for off axis decay [message #21320 is a reply to message #21319] Thu, 06 October 2005 01:23 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Duke is currently offline  Duke
Messages: 297
Registered: May 2009
Grand Master
I've played around with high-efficiency wizzer-coned Fostex drivers a bit of late, and their HF radiation pattern is considerably wider than piston theory would predict. But then I suppose that's to be expected of a driver in breakup, which is what I think is happening with a wizzer cone.

The system I recently built and displayed at RMAF is based on the Fostex FE-206E, and in the design I went to some length to generate a well energized, tonally fairly well-balanced reverberant field, making a few trade-offs along the way. I did not try to control the pattern tightly, as I don't think this type of driver lends itself to particularly well-controlled radiation patterns. For instance, even with a lot of toe-in (Geddes-style) I was still getting some undesirable sidewall interaction from the 8" diameter Fostex drivers, and had to resort to using a plant along one sidewall.

In my experience a good horn or waveguide-based system does a considerably better job of radiation pattern control, provided attention is devoted to minimizing the pattern discrepancy between woofer and horn where they transition. A good fullrange driver has its attributes, but when it comes to pattern control a waveguide or constant-directivity horn is a much more effective device.

Duke

Re: Benefits of a wideband driver for off axis decay [message #21321 is a reply to message #21320] Thu, 06 October 2005 02:03 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18789
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

I would love to hear your new FE-206 based speaker. That's one of the Fostex drivers I think makes a very nice full range loudspeaker. It has adequate extension both HF and LF and sufficient efficiency and power handling ability to fill the room pretty well. I hope you'll bring a pair to GPAF next May.


Re: Benefits of a wideband driver for off axis decay [message #21322 is a reply to message #21320] Thu, 06 October 2005 06:35 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Bob Brines is currently offline  Bob Brines
Messages: 186
Registered: May 2009
Location: Hot Springs Village, AR
Master

Predicting the directivity of a full-range driver is probably nearly impossible. In order to be be "full-range", the driver has to operate into break-up mode, then it mechanically crosses over to the whizzer cone or dust cap and the process starts over. The graph above is for a speaker using the FE167E, a 6" whizzer-cone driver. The plots are 0, 30 and 60 degrees. You can speculate as to which part of the driver is producing what frequency and where cross-over points are. In any case, there is a lot more energy off axis than for a normal 6" driver.

My experience is that the speakers work best toed to cross behind the listener. Imaging is still good at this point and the overall balance is better than normal toe-in. Straight forward, zero toe works well for HT, but leaves too much hole in the middle for music.

Bob


Bob

worth 1.0k words [message #21323 is a reply to message #21322] Thu, 06 October 2005 12:20 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Duke is currently offline  Duke
Messages: 297
Registered: May 2009
Grand Master
Hi Bob,

Yes I enjoyed your speakers at GPAF, and have enjoyed your website as well.

The on- and off-axis curves you posted are most informative - thanks! I would guess that somewhere between the top two curves - maybe around 15 degrees ballpark - the first-arrival response is smoothest. Then the rising on-axis energy instead becomes reverberant energy, helping to maintain a better tonal balance for the reverberant field than you'd normally get from "flat on-axis" speakers.

For the sake of a wider listening area, I toe my Fostex's in so that they criss-cross in just front of the listener rather than just behind. Also, the FE206E isn't as smooth as the FE167E (more energy between 2k and 10k), so I use a broad, gentle notch filter to bring that region down just a skosh.

Duke




The Cheetahs [message #21324 is a reply to message #21321] Thu, 06 October 2005 12:59 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Duke is currently offline  Duke
Messages: 297
Registered: May 2009
Grand Master

Hi Wayne,

In all fairness, my FE206E-based speaker isn't exactly a "single-driver" speaker. I'm using a couple of powered woofers to get adequate bottom end extension in a reasonable box size. Since this is of course cheating, the speakers sort of named themselves.

Assuming the picture shows up, the two 6.5" woofers you see are driven by a plate amp on the back of the cabinet. I'm also using a couple of rear-firing drivers to tailor the reverberant field the way I want it. And yes, the stands are too short.

If the picture doesn't show up, here's a link:

http://gallery.AudioAsylum.com//cgi/gi.mpl?u=2112&f=Cheetah1.jpg

Duke

Re: The Cheetahs [message #21325 is a reply to message #21324] Thu, 06 October 2005 13:08 Go to previous messageGo to next message
akhilesh is currently offline  akhilesh
Messages: 1275
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
The look great, Duke. Hope you bring them down to the next GPAF. Iowa is closer than nawlins!
-akhilesh

Re: The Cheetahs [message #21326 is a reply to message #21325] Thu, 06 October 2005 14:07 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Duke is currently offline  Duke
Messages: 297
Registered: May 2009
Grand Master
Thanks, Akhilesh!

Lori and I are looking forward to attending GPAF again next year. I plan to bring the Cheetahs, and may bring something else as well. I have a couple of other projects in the works, and later today I'll be "making sawdust" - that is, building a prototype box.

Earl was at RMAF in another room, and showed an interesting subwoofer with the Summas. I also had a pair of Summas in my room, and alternated between his and mine.

Duke

Re: Benefits of a wideband driver for off axis decay [message #21401 is a reply to message #21318] Tue, 27 December 2005 15:38 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Retsel is currently offline  Retsel
Messages: 23
Registered: May 2009
Chancellor
Another approach to reducing off axis sound output and therefore reducing reflections is to mount the wide range drivers on open baffles.

Retsel

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