Home » Audio » Speaker » Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers
Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21751] Sat, 23 December 2006 13:07 Go to next message
JLM is currently offline  JLM
Messages: 69
Registered: May 2009
Viscount
IMO the following are not single driver speakers:

Designs with coaxial drivers;

Use of use of two identical/similar drivers;

Adding sub-woofers.

Heck, I even cringe at including drivers that use of whizzer cones.


IMO there aren't many actual single driver speakers because of a lack of true full range drivers (most are mid/tweeters even if they're 8 inches across).

In many places folks delude themselves into believing that response somewhat flat to down around 50 Hz makes for a full range speaker.

I applaud everyone here for striving for realistic bass. OTOH if we really held to the single driver premise there would be little to discuss here. To get back on track, lets list all known single driver speakers with full/realistic bass (with a somewhat loose definition of "full bass").

But by all means let the premise serve the music, in other words if push comes to shove full range music should not be sacrificed to serve the ideal.

Re: Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21752 is a reply to message #21751] Sat, 23 December 2006 19:24 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Bill Wassilak is currently offline  Bill Wassilak
Messages: 402
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (1st Degree)
{To get back on track, lets list all known single driver speakers with full/realistic bass (with a somewhat loose definition of "full bass").
}

Listen to some of Bob Brines speakers he's used Lowthers and Fostex, and I thought they were some of the best sounding full range drivers with TRUE Bass for a full range driver, being used in bass reflex and transmission lines. His link is on this board.

I've also heard Fostex FE series in some Tuned quarter wave pipes that sounded pretty damn good.


Re: Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21753 is a reply to message #21752] Sun, 24 December 2006 06:09 Go to previous messageGo to next message
JLM is currently offline  JLM
Messages: 69
Registered: May 2009
Viscount
Couldn't agree more re: Brines.

(I'm the guy who asked Bob to create the FTA-2000, but didn't want to preach on my own stuff.)

I've been a MLTL fan since the 70's and more recently a convert to single driver designs. The mighty Fostex F200A makes it possible. Reportedly other driver exist that might match it, but at much higher prices.

At the risk of sidetracking here, I don't believe in doppler effect in extended range drivers. The complex waveform is not made up of separate bass, midrange, and treble signals, but one integrated one, therefore different frequencies are not piggybacked on each other as some would propose. In fact if that were the case, we'd need an infinite number of drivers so that each could reproduce their own unique frequency.

I do agree with Bob regarding the limitations of extended range drivers, but prefer the volume levels and simplier musical forms they do best so it's of little matter to me.

The only example of FE series Fostex drivers that I liked was a FE206E in 0.75 cu. ft. bass reflex cabinet. Wouldn't meet my "full bass" definition, but didn't sound thin like so many others have and mated well with a sub.

Re: Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21754 is a reply to message #21753] Sun, 24 December 2006 08:42 Go to previous messageGo to next message
akhilesh is currently offline  akhilesh
Messages: 1275
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
HI,
Have you tried a wide range driver? In my listening experience, if say 80 hz till about 3500 Hz are covered by one driver, the loss in coherence is realy small, but the gains in frequency extension, beaming loss & efficiency, at least in my opinion, more than make up for it. I have never heard the f200A, it looks fantastic on paper in terms of greq ccurve & Freq extension, but the lack of efficiency bothered me somewhat.
Also, it will have serious beaming over 2000 Hz, just becuase of its size.
-akhilesh

Re: Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21755 is a reply to message #21751] Sun, 24 December 2006 14:33 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
IMO, the full-range magic is due to lack if phasing errors in the important 300-3000 Hz frequency range. This means no crossover 150-6000 Hz. Outside of that frequency range, you can do most anything you want and the magic will still be there. Best bet should then be a 4-6" driver supplemented with a sub and for the bat-eared, as tweeter. Some day, I'm going to suck it up and get a pair of DX55's and see what happens. For now, I think that the DX3 is the best overall full-ranger.

Full-rangers CAN do bass. My bench mark is 40 Hz. If a full-ranger can get down to 40 Hz, then I'll use it in a single-driver speaker. Drivers I know that will go there are the FE167E, FE206E and FE207E. The F200A is the best of the bunch at the bottom. DX2 and DX3 go there. AN6 and AN8 go there. Last March, I took a pair of DX2 MLTL's to a Texas Bottlehead meet. They physically shook the floor on some organ petal notes.

Yes, full-range single driver speakers will do bass. The trade-off? Dynamic range. TANSTAAFL.

Bob


Re: Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21757 is a reply to message #21755] Sun, 24 December 2006 21:55 Go to previous messageGo to next message
akhilesh is currently offline  akhilesh
Messages: 1275
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
I agree Bob.
One other issue with using the single / wide range driver to produce the bass is IM distortion. For example, the trusonics easily produce 40 Hz in a BR box, but if I cross them higher, te reduction in IM distortion is clearly audible. Very audible in fact. Same with the dca drivers I have in a PAWO horn..these go down to 40 hz..amazing for a 4 inch driver...but the IM distortion is pretty high. Afain, crossing them at 70 Hz 24 db/octave makes hem much clearer.

With the 24 db / oct xover I use, 90-3500 hz crossover seems to be the magic number, at least for the trusonics. With 12 db xovers, I agree, the driver should be bale to go upto 6000 Hz with no issues.
I think each driver is a little different, which is one of the reasons there is so much value added by builders like you & Wayne, who pretty much take the trial & error out of it for most folks trying a driver for the first time.
-akhilesh

Re: Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21758 is a reply to message #21754] Mon, 25 December 2006 06:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
JLM is currently offline  JLM
Messages: 69
Registered: May 2009
Viscount
Beaming is seen by some as an advantage as it reduces room interaction at the affected frquencies and can be used to tune the speaker by simply aiming the driver at or away from the listener. Unfortunately the smaller Fostex F120A is no longer available and no other Fostex driver matches the sound qualities I like in the F200A.

Efficiency can also be an advantage as background noise stays farther into the background. Unfortunately smaller drivers are less efficient.

Marketing hype has convinced us for the "need" to reach 20 - 20,000 Hz at outrageous spl's. This serves to make building good speakers much harder and distracts from the heart of most musical forms.

As Bob stated above, most drivers that are called "full range" aren't really and would be better served if used as extended midrange. But that whole discussion belongs in a different forum.

As an old fart, 30 - 10,000 Hz and 90 dB continous with 100 dB peaks is plenty for me.

Re: Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21759 is a reply to message #21755] Mon, 25 December 2006 06:58 Go to previous messageGo to next message
JLM is currently offline  JLM
Messages: 69
Registered: May 2009
Viscount
I agree that the perhaps the best application of extended range drivers would be an active sub and tweeter with only a protective cap. So what are some good 4 - 6 inch whizzerless drivers, higher the efficiency the better?

Re: Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21760 is a reply to message #21757] Mon, 25 December 2006 09:46 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
I agree about the IM distortion. I've often heard that single-drivers speakers won't do complex music, whatever that is. Actually, won't do music heavily loaded in the 60-100 Hz range. This is where most of the IM is generated. I have crossed a pair of FE167E BR's at ~ 100 Hz (HT mains defined as "small") and all of the IM problems disappear.

Bob


Re: Why so many posts here are not about single driver speakers [message #21761 is a reply to message #21758] Mon, 25 December 2006 19:49 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
akhilesh is currently offline  akhilesh
Messages: 1275
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
"Beaming is seen by some as an advantage as it reduces room interaction at the affected frquencies and can be used to tune the speaker by simply aiming the driver at or away from the listener."
Yes, but it also causes a reverberant field that emphasizes the lower frequencies....takes away from lifelike tone of instruments etc. This refers to constant directivity.
-akhilesh

Previous Topic: Optical in
Next Topic: New Here
Goto Forum:
  


Current Time: Fri Nov 22 08:14:21 CST 2024

Sponsoring Organizations

DIY Audio Projects
DIY Audio Projects
OddWatt Audio
OddWatt Audio
Pi Speakers
Pi Speakers
Prosound Shootout
Prosound Shootout
Miller Audio
Miller Audio
Tubes For Amps
TubesForAmps.com

Lone Star Audiofest