hi anyone know which 15" units these use please?
any precisely what this means and how its done?
Crossover design: minimum-phase type (6dB/octave) compensated for driver response anomalies and resonance/phase variations
sadly, the designer has now passed on, one would've hoped he would give some info b4 passing.
only way to find out now is to get a pair and reverse engineer
thanks!!
any precisely what this means and how its done?
Crossover design: minimum-phase type (6dB/octave) compensated for driver response anomalies and resonance/phase variations
sadly, the designer has now passed on, one would've hoped he would give some info b4 passing.
only way to find out now is to get a pair and reverse engineer
thanks!!
"Crossover design: minimum-phase type (6dB/octave) compensated for driver response anomalies and resonance/phase variations"
Dunlavy speakers used XOs which when combined with each drivers frequency response which resulted in true 1st order acoutstic slopes. They were usually pretty complex and had lots of components. The XO for the DUnlavy SC IV had something like 35-40 components in it. See the review and measurements of the SC VI for more details over on Stereophile's website.
Regards,
Dennis
Dunlavy speakers used XOs which when combined with each drivers frequency response which resulted in true 1st order acoutstic slopes. They were usually pretty complex and had lots of components. The XO for the DUnlavy SC IV had something like 35-40 components in it. See the review and measurements of the SC VI for more details over on Stereophile's website.
Regards,
Dennis
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