Home » Audio » Speaker » Basshorns - Pro and Con
Re: Basshorns - Pro and Con [message #17397 is a reply to message #17391] Sat, 15 January 2005 21:26 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18784
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)
This forum, I think, is both for novices and experts alike.

When someone comes in and asks a basic question, I like to give them any help I can without making them feel uncomfortable. When I have a moment to reply, I try to do so. Sometimes it's just a matter of looking up something in the archives and making a link. I don't want people to feel stupid when asking a question. After all, a person with a PhD in medicine may not know Ohms law, so it is understandable if they don't know how to calculate electrical things. So it's nice to lend a hand.

I also like it when experts can kick ideas around. It's especially nice because I feel like people here listen to one another, as opposed to trying to trip each other up in order to win an argument. So in that way, we really do have a nice way to address both needs, helping the new guy with a hobby project or system, and allowing experts to discuss the finer details of audio and sometimes even break new ground together.

Re: Basshorns - Pro and Con [message #17406 is a reply to message #17397] Mon, 17 January 2005 12:19 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Earl Geddes is currently offline  Earl Geddes
Messages: 220
Registered: May 2009
Master
This situation always causes problem though. If I answer a question with the "real" answer then it is over the readers head and I am accused of being eletist and arrogant. If I answer with the "common" answer, then I am not really adding value since a lot of people can do this.

So you see that the only meaningful thing that I can answer with is the answer that I know to be the right one even if this does just blow past the reader. To do otherwise is really just a waste of time. The Floyd Toole article is a classic example. His article was aimed at the common understanding not at the current state-of-the-art thinking. But then I always get follow on questions and critics that my answers don't agree with "the experts" of "common understanding/knowledge".

I understand where you might want both answers on your site, but I will probably never answer with the "common" answer. So when you see one of my answers you can probably expect it to be contrary to the common one.



Re: Basshorns - Pro and Con [message #17407 is a reply to message #17406] Mon, 17 January 2005 12:47 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18784
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)
Sure, if someone asks how fast a rock falls, you could go into the matter of the Earth's rotation and being in orbit around the Sun which is also in motion. You could make the point that the rock isn't really falling and that its motion isn't a straight line. You might describe the effects of wind resistance and aerodynamics. Or you could just tell them that the rock will accelerate towards the ground at the rate of 9.8m/s/s.

Re: Dont waste! [message #17408 is a reply to message #17374] Mon, 17 January 2005 17:03 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mike.e is currently offline  Mike.e
Messages: 471
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (1st Degree)
I havent built one of this size,But

Something with decent BL,preferbaly high cone angle for strength and moderate Fs. ALot of typical prosound drivers that are strong with powerful magnets and low Qes specs. High Xmax is nice too...Flux shorting rings to reduce midrange distortion are bonuses.

Designing the horn is easy-its putting it into practise thats difficult!

an 18" or two like this perhaps...


18LW1400 - eighteensound



Re: Basshorns - Pro and Con [message #17409 is a reply to message #17406] Mon, 17 January 2005 20:10 Go to previous messageGo to next message
mikebake is currently offline  mikebake
Messages: 243
Registered: May 2009
Grand Master
"So when you see one of my answers you can probably expect it to be contrary to the common one."
Why, is the common one wrong that often?

Re: Basshorns - Pro and Con [message #17410 is a reply to message #17409] Mon, 17 January 2005 21:04 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Earl Geddes is currently offline  Earl Geddes
Messages: 220
Registered: May 2009
Master
Well let me just give you a list of "common beliefs" that I have found wrong in the last year alone:

1) THD and IMD indicate perceived distortion - wrong! In a widely quoted subjective test we showed that there is no correlation between THD or IMD and the perception of distortion in an audio system.

2) Compression drivers have too much distortion for quality sound - wrong! In a recent, as yet unpublished, psychoacoustics study of compression drivers no one, out of 45 subjects, could detect any level of nonlinear distortion in any of three different makes of compression drivers - all the way up to the thermal limit of these high end pro units. There is NO perceptable nonlinear distortion in a compression driver - none!

3) Horns and compression drivers cannot be made with "audiophile" caliber sound quality because of their distortion - wrong! In a double blind subjective study of my designs using a waveguide and a compression driver, 15 subjects rated this system equal to or better than a high end "audiophile" system using audiophile "Danish" components. (And costing $4500 each I might add!)

I have long held the belief that small rooms should be very live - completely contrary to popular opinions. I point my speakers in board - I don't listen on-axis.

Basically, I have come to at least question every "common knowledge" aspect of audio until it has been proven through statistically significant double blind psychoacoustic tests. So I may not disagree with everything but I accept nothing based on "experince", measurements, etc. If it ain't been proven in a valid double blind test it ain't necessarily so.




Re: Basshorns - Pro and Con [message #17412 is a reply to message #17410] Tue, 18 January 2005 10:44 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Albert AG is currently offline  Albert AG
Messages: 1
Registered: May 2009
Esquire
What do you think of Bart Locanthi and his designs? What about TAD and their speakers? Think they're "audiophile" caliber sound quality?

Re: Basshorns - Pro and Con [message #17414 is a reply to message #17412] Tue, 18 January 2005 12:48 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Earl Geddes is currently offline  Earl Geddes
Messages: 220
Registered: May 2009
Master

Bart was a good friend. While he was alive, he used to call me up all the time to talk about cars! Of all things, because I worked at a car company and knew quite a bit about them. All I wanted to talk about was audio, but that was work to him. SO we talked a lot, but not usually about audio!

TAD was my prefered driver - until recently. I wanted to test whether or not the TAD drivers could really out class a lessor expensive set of drivers in a well designed system. A subjective test was run with 16 subjects comparing TAD's to B&C's in identical systems (optimized crossovers of course). The results did not indicate that the TAD's were worth the extra cost. In fact they even indicated the opposite although there was not enough data to be sure of that conclusion.

So now I believe that once one has a truely good system design, the actual components, as long as they are of good quality, don't really enter into the equation.

This is once again not the prevailing philosophy, and until recently was not even mine. But I am not going to ignore the mounds of data that have accumulated indicating otherwise.



Double Blind [message #17416 is a reply to message #17414] Tue, 18 January 2005 17:36 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Mike.e is currently offline  Mike.e
Messages: 471
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (1st Degree)
Hi Earl
To me double blind testing seems the only way to do it!
This is a fact based not a faith based system of science!

Some did attempt to argue that ABX testing is flawed,but Ive yet to see proof or reason why.

To me abit of sanity[reason] in the audio world,is like an oasis in the desert!

Cheers
Mike.e

Re: Basshorns - Pro and Con [message #17431 is a reply to message #17410] Sat, 22 January 2005 10:41 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
mikebake is currently offline  mikebake
Messages: 243
Registered: May 2009
Grand Master
Well, much of what you say is music to my ears, as I like compression drivers and horns! How would I go about hearing your creation? I am in west central Ohio.

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