theater six? [message #50848] |
Mon, 19 March 2007 17:44 |
tmoore
Messages: 15 Registered: May 2009
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Chancellor |
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Wayne, how do the theater six cornerhorns compare sonically to the theater 7's? The slightly smaller size would be an advantage in my 11 x 11.5 office.
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Re: theater six? [message #50857 is a reply to message #50856] |
Tue, 20 March 2007 20:32 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18789 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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You could probably do something like that, sure. It would probably sound pretty good. The midhorn I designed probably wouldn't work well with the Alpha 8MR, but you could change the throat and flare a little bit and come up with a very similar design. If you were able to get response up to 3.5kHz, you could probably crossover to something like the APT series tweeters on top. On the lower end, I expect you could get response down to 400Hz from an Alpha 8MR midhorn.Personally, I like to crossover a little bit lower than that. Lots of three-way loudspeakers have crossover between 400Hz and 600Hz. It's kind of a popular place to put a crossover point, I suspect probably because it's easier to get a smaller midrange to work there. But that is right in the middle of the vocal range and I don't like to crossover between 200Hz and 2kHz if I can help it. I generally try to design my speakers so that as much as possible of the 200Hz-2kHz band is covered by one driver. Having lower crossover allows the vocal range to be covered by one driver. Woofer-to-mid distances can be greater and summing is still good. Midbass room modes can be smoothed by having sound from both the midhorn and the bass bin. So having a lower crossover point for the midrange seems ideal to me.
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