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Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71120] Sat, 28 January 2012 22:15 Go to next message
Norbert is currently offline  Norbert
Messages: 42
Registered: May 2009
Baron
While reading other posters questions around complementing a sub woofer with 4 Pi it kind of got me curious so I did a quick and dirty test using an existing JBL sub woofer that I have connected to my Home theater and tapped it into my current 2 channel setup with a Y- RCA cable off one of the channels between my DAC and SET amp.
My JBL sub woofer have a variable cross-over and variable gain so it allowed me to adjust its output to blend with the 4 Pi...
Overall, the sound from the sub was difficult to blend with 4 Pi and in some cases, I noticed the sound from the sub was a little out of sync from 4 Pi.

Question, will the issues mentioned above still be there if I build 3 Pi sub woofer and use Pyle crone cross-over mentioned by Wayne? I'm thinking of re-using one of my decommissioned Eminence Omega speakers when I build the 3 Pi sub.


Thanks
Re: Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71121 is a reply to message #71120] Sun, 29 January 2012 00:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18786
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

Honestly, as long as the subwoofers you use are of good quality, it doesn't matter as much what brands and models you use. What matters more is their positions and low-pass slopes. The main thing is you shouldn't expect any single subwoofer to integrate well. It won't. If you fiddle with it enough you might get it to sound OK for one listener in one spot, but even then, it won't be nearly as good as using at least two flanking subs.

I suggest starting off with two flanking subs, setup as described in the links below. That will give good bass extension and will sound great. It will smooth the modal range down to about 80Hz, and this is sometimes all that is needed. If you find you still have a room mode below that point, add one or two subs placed further away. This is also discussed in the links below.
Re: Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71122 is a reply to message #71121] Sun, 29 January 2012 15:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
feket663 is currently offline  feket663
Messages: 28
Registered: August 2009
Location: Hungary
Chancellor
Dear Wayne! I'd like build a pair of subwoofers for my 4PI speakers. You recommend the LAB12, but here in Europe the price is very-very high( $180 vs. 245 Euro(approxx 320 usd) ) Can you recommend me similar, but cheaper subwoofer drivers for music listening?
Re: Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71123 is a reply to message #71122] Sun, 29 January 2012 17:22 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18786
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

There are lots of good subwoofer drivers on the market. I use an OEM driver that is very similar to the LAB12, machined to fit my cooling plug. So naturally that's the best driver for me to use. But it could almost be considered a commodity part. Direct radiating subs aren't nearly as tricky to design as constant directivity mains are.

Find a woofer that is in your price range and use a T/S modeling program to find the box and port size. You can pretty much just hit the "align" button to optimize. For subs, that's pretty much all there is to it. I generally like to tune slightly lower in frequency than an auto-optimized max-flat alignment, but that's easy to do. Just make the port slightly longer than it says; Adjust the parameters to tune the box 10% lower, e.g. 27Hz if auto-align suggests 30Hz. That will make the system slightly overdamped, which is more tolerant of parameter shifts and a little more "room friendly" too. Subs made this way won't get peaky when pushed too hard or when used in rooms with unusually bad acoustics.

Re: Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71126 is a reply to message #71121] Sun, 29 January 2012 23:14 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Norbert is currently offline  Norbert
Messages: 42
Registered: May 2009
Baron
Wayne,

thanks for the links... So starting with two flanking subs it is.
Due to room space constraint, is there a big difference in sound quality between 8, 10, and 12 inch woofers if the the boxes are tuned for the same frequency range?
Re: Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71130 is a reply to message #71123] Mon, 30 January 2012 07:54 Go to previous messageGo to next message
feket663 is currently offline  feket663
Messages: 28
Registered: August 2009
Location: Hungary
Chancellor
Wayne Parham wrote on Mon, 30 January 2012 00:22

There are lots of good subwoofer drivers on the market. I use an OEM driver that is very similar to the LAB12, machined to fit my cooling plug. So naturally that's the best driver for me to use. But it could almost be considered a commodity part. Direct radiating subs aren't nearly as tricky to design as constant directivity mains are.

Find a woofer that is in your price range and use a T/S modeling program to find the box and port size. You can pretty much just hit the "align" button to optimize. For subs, that's pretty much all there is to it. I generally like to tune slightly lower in frequency than an auto-optimized max-flat alignment, but that's easy to do. Just make the port slightly longer than it says; Adjust the parameters to tune the box 10% lower, e.g. 27Hz if auto-align suggests 30Hz. That will make the system slightly overdamped, which is more tolerant of parameter shifts and a little more "room friendly" too. Subs made this way won't get peaky when pushed too hard or when used in rooms with unusually bad acoustics.



Thanks Wayne! I think I found my driver:

http://www.stx.pl/product/attachment/99b5b71954ed6694014cbedd15658d25/pl_PL/SW-STX-15-4-1200-8-F-S-MC.pdf


Re: Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71132 is a reply to message #71126] Mon, 30 January 2012 08:02 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18786
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

Norbert wrote on Sun, 29 January 2012 23:14
Wayne,

thanks for the links... So starting with two flanking subs it is.
Due to room space constraint, is there a big difference in sound quality between 8, 10, and 12 inch woofers if the the boxes are tuned for the same frequency range?

Where subs are concerned, woofer size shouldn't be considered a qualitative difference, but rather a quantitative difference. Subs are pretty simple systems, and the biggest differences where cone size is concerned are mass and radiator area. Increased mass tends to tune the system for lower frequency and larger radiating area tends to make the system more efficient. But the larger cones also tend to make the box requirement larger too. If you need a physically small box size, and bass extension is desired too, then the cone size will need to be smaller to allow the proper box alignment for a sub.

Re: Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71134 is a reply to message #71130] Mon, 30 January 2012 10:07 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18786
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

feket663 wrote on Mon, 30 January 2012 07:54
Thanks Wayne! I think I found my driver:

http://www.stx.pl/product/attachment/99b5b71954ed6694014cbedd15658d25/pl_PL/SW-STX-15-4-1200-8-F-S-MC.pdf


I couldn't open the attachment from that link, but I did find the driver here:

http://www.stx.pl/wm-stx-15-2-500-8-f-s-mc-duplikat-1.html

387 Zloty = 120 USD, not a bad price. Should do nicely, I think. Couldn't see the T/S parameters because the PDF file wasn't there. But hopefully you can tune it low enough for your needs without making the box too big.

As an aside, I was in Warsaw a few times and when I left, I never exchanged my money. So I have some Zloty and Grosz coins. I kind of like having a little collection of interesting coins.

Re: Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71138 is a reply to message #71134] Mon, 30 January 2012 13:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
feket663 is currently offline  feket663
Messages: 28
Registered: August 2009
Location: Hungary
Chancellor
Wayne Parham wrote on Mon, 30 January 2012 17:07

feket663 wrote on Mon, 30 January 2012 07:54
Thanks Wayne! I think I found my driver:

http://www.stx.pl/product/attachment/99b5b71954ed6694014cbedd15658d25/pl_PL/SW-STX-15-4-1200-8-F-S-MC.pdf


I couldn't open the attachment from that link, but I did find the driver here:

http://www.stx.pl/wm-stx-15-2-500-8-f-s-mc-duplikat-1.html

387 Zloty = 120 USD, not a bad price. Should do nicely, I think. Couldn't see the T/S parameters because the PDF file wasn't there. But hopefully you can tune it low enough for your needs without making the box too big.

As an aside, I was in Warsaw a few times and when I left, I never exchanged my money. So I have some Zloty and Grosz coins. I kind of like having a little collection of interesting coins.




index.php?t=getfile&id=702&private=0

here it is!
  • Attachment: stx.JPG
    (Size: 89.61KB, Downloaded 4731 times)
Re: Another Sub woofer Q&A [message #71139 is a reply to message #71138] Mon, 30 January 2012 14:09 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18786
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

I must level with you. That woofer isn't a sub. It might be a fine midwoofer, because it is tuned like so many others that have been designed to run in 75-150 liter boxes tuned to 35-40Hz. This has become a defacto standard tuning for prosound midwoofers, and it works great for mains where the woofer will be used down to 40Hz or 60Hz or so. But it's really not the best choice for use as a dedicated subwoofer.

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