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Pi Midhorn with FOSTEX speaker [message #46705] Wed, 13 April 2005 04:49 Go to next message
Eric Mainardi is currently offline  Eric Mainardi
Messages: 22
Registered: May 2009
Chancellor
About the integrity of the 100 to 5000Hz range, where the ear is most sensitive :
With the Pi Midhorn, rather than the JBL 2012H which shows a smooth but ascending curve from 100 to 2500Hz, why not use the really audiophile FE208E Sigma FOSTEX speaker which has a flat response from 100Hz to 5K with an average 97dB efficiency ? Or the less expensive FE206E ?

http://www.fostexinternational.com/docs/speaker_comp/FE-E-Sigma-Series.shtml

http://www.fostexinternational.com/docs/speaker_comp/FE-Series.shtml

Re: Pi Midhorn with FOSTEX speaker [message #46706 is a reply to message #46705] Wed, 13 April 2005 08:36 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18791
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

When a driver is used on a horn, its response is changed dramatically. Much of what you see as rising response in a direct radiator is caused by collapsing directivity, as it goes from being an omnidirectional source to being more and more directional as frequency goes up. A horn sets the directivity and changes that.

If a direct radiator has a flat response curve on axis over a very wide frequency range, then it actually reduces acoustic energy as frequency rises. This compensates for collapsing DI as a direct radiator, but it also reduces output at high frequency when used on a horn.


Re: Pi Midhorn with FOSTEX speaker [message #46710 is a reply to message #46706] Wed, 13 April 2005 11:05 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Eric Mainardi is currently offline  Eric Mainardi
Messages: 22
Registered: May 2009
Chancellor
Thanks, Wayne.

I have a pair of E-V DL10X : it seems even better than JBL 2012H and is claimed as "suitable for horn loaded mid range devices".
Does it match your Pi midrange horn ?

BTW, what is the typical response of your midrange horn ?



Re: Pi Midhorn with FOSTEX speaker [message #46711 is a reply to message #46710] Wed, 13 April 2005 11:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18791
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

You might want to try them in a π midrange horn, or something like it. You can have them made locally, or I can ship you a flat pack. They generally work best from 200Hz to 2kHz, although this range is driver specific. Some drivers don't get much past 1kHz and others have output all the way to 3kHz and beyond. Output above 2kHz is generally breakup mode resonances, so I generally prefer to limit output to 2kHz or so. But most of the better drivers don't go up that high because anyway breakup modes are suppressed.
Re: Pi Midhorn with FOSTEX speaker [message #46717 is a reply to message #46706] Fri, 15 April 2005 00:52 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Kim Schultz is currently offline  Kim Schultz
Messages: 85
Registered: May 2009
Viscount
How do you predict how high a horn loads the driver ?

I have made a couple of 200hz round fronthorn, and they sound great with Lowther PM2A but they have too much midrange with Coral Beta 8.

Now I know that its because of the Coral driver having a flat response vesus the Lowther which has a rising response curve.

Does the horn load up to the wavelenght that matches the diameter of the horn mouth ?

Re: Pi Midhorn with FOSTEX speaker [message #46718 is a reply to message #46717] Fri, 15 April 2005 06:25 Go to previous message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18791
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

You can predict pistonic behavior with modelers like Hornresp, but the problem is that high frequency response is much more determined by cone breakup and phase plug or lack thereof. These don't enter into models like Hornresp. You can estimate response by overlaying the driver's response with the horn's pistonic model, and algebraically adding them. But to make an accurate prediction, you would really need an element model of some sort. Or, of course, a physical model.

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