I think the reason for the small surround models you're seeing is the assumption that they will be used in a typical home theater setup. That is, the low bass will be redirected to the subwoofer(s).
I would say it's more important to find surrounds (and center channel) that match the frequency & phase response of your main left & right speakers as closely as possible, if not the exact same models.
When I first started messing with surround sound, my mismatched center & surrounds worked OK for movies (center for dialogue, surrounds for effects). But it wasn't until I was able to acquire a matching set of 5 speakers that it really began to work well for music. Nowadays, I'm a big fan of surround, and a total sucker for all the 5.1 (and 4.0) music mixes & remixes that are out there. Some of them are fun, others are magnificent.
I would say it's more important to find surrounds (and center channel) that match the frequency & phase response of your main left & right speakers as closely as possible, if not the exact same models.
When I first started messing with surround sound, my mismatched center & surrounds worked OK for movies (center for dialogue, surrounds for effects). But it wasn't until I was able to acquire a matching set of 5 speakers that it really began to work well for music. Nowadays, I'm a big fan of surround, and a total sucker for all the 5.1 (and 4.0) music mixes & remixes that are out there. Some of them are fun, others are magnificent.
Dayton RS180-4 and RS180-8, Which is better woofer for surround channel speakers ?
I am bit confused to buy between this two woofer.
I am providing Spec list Link for two woofers below -
1. Dayton Audio RS180-4 - RS180-4 7" Reference Woofer 4 Ohm Specification Sheet
2. Dayton Audio RS180-8 - RS180-8 7" Reference Woofer 8 Ohm Specification Sheet
I want this woofer for 2-way design and sealed enclosure for home theater surround channel speaker.
Dayton Audio RS180-4 advantages -
1. Lower Sealed F3
2. Higher SPL
Dayton Audio RS180-8 advantages -
1. Higher BL
2. Lower Qms, Qes and Qts
Which one of this woofer will be suitable for my requirements ?
And i want this woofer to crossover with Dayton RS28F-4 tweeter.
Dayton Audio RS28F-4 tweeter - RS28F-4 1-1/8" Silk Dome Tweeter 4 Ohm Specification Sheet
Please don't suggest other brands because except peerless fabrikkerne India no other brands are available in my region.
Some other brands available like PA Audio and Fane Internation, but i think there are more for PA speakers rather than home theatre speakers.
I am bit confused to buy between this two woofer.
I am providing Spec list Link for two woofers below -
1. Dayton Audio RS180-4 - RS180-4 7" Reference Woofer 4 Ohm Specification Sheet
2. Dayton Audio RS180-8 - RS180-8 7" Reference Woofer 8 Ohm Specification Sheet
I want this woofer for 2-way design and sealed enclosure for home theater surround channel speaker.
Dayton Audio RS180-4 advantages -
1. Lower Sealed F3
2. Higher SPL
Dayton Audio RS180-8 advantages -
1. Higher BL
2. Lower Qms, Qes and Qts
Which one of this woofer will be suitable for my requirements ?
And i want this woofer to crossover with Dayton RS28F-4 tweeter.
Dayton Audio RS28F-4 tweeter - RS28F-4 1-1/8" Silk Dome Tweeter 4 Ohm Specification Sheet
Please don't suggest other brands because except peerless fabrikkerne India no other brands are available in my region.
Some other brands available like PA Audio and Fane Internation, but i think there are more for PA speakers rather than home theatre speakers.
Since sealed designs for surrounds are supposed to be unobtrusive then I would personally go with whichever gives you a smaller box volume.
Looks like the 4Ω version would give you that at 67hz F3 or so which to me would be about perfect for a surround speaker.
Also look at the Dayton Audio RS180P-4 it has a paper cone and possibly even smaller box dimension with an 80hz F3.
I'm partial to paper cone drivers though.......
I'm interested in the crossover you choose.
Looks like the 4Ω version would give you that at 67hz F3 or so which to me would be about perfect for a surround speaker.
Also look at the Dayton Audio RS180P-4 it has a paper cone and possibly even smaller box dimension with an 80hz F3.
I'm partial to paper cone drivers though.......
I'm interested in the crossover you choose.
I'm interested in the crossover you choose.
I am thinking of active crossover with mono channel amplifier of RMS output 100 W @ 8 ohms. Because with active crossover, it will be more flexible for me to try and test different crossover points to find linear frequency response at crossover region. What your suggestion on this ?
dipankar862,
See if these threads help - XO points discussed:
https://sites.google.com/site/undefinition/core-2-way
Core 2-Way - Build Tread - Techtalk Speaker Building, Audio, Video Discussion Forum
See if these threads help - XO points discussed:
https://sites.google.com/site/undefinition/core-2-way
Core 2-Way - Build Tread - Techtalk Speaker Building, Audio, Video Discussion Forum
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I have considered using a pair of minidsp 2x4's to replace the 3-way crossovers + sub I'm currently working with.
I think dsp is a really neat idea.
I don't understand how you can crossover between two drivers. Does DSP has crossover features?
Yes, you need one amplifier for each driver used.
SO for a pair of 2-Way speakers you would need a total of 4 channels of amplification.
The DSP handles the crossover by only sending lows to the woofer amp and highs to the tweeter amp.
You can program them for similar slopes to a passive crossover but you eliminate the reactance that the crossover can cause with the drivers used.
SO for a pair of 2-Way speakers you would need a total of 4 channels of amplification.
The DSP handles the crossover by only sending lows to the woofer amp and highs to the tweeter amp.
You can program them for similar slopes to a passive crossover but you eliminate the reactance that the crossover can cause with the drivers used.
aka active two way.
so for 5.1 you need a 2 channel amp and 2 channel dsp per channel
i ran down this rabbit hole for the fine tuning ability.
i ended up with a custom DAC for each range.
i stuck with two channel cos of many devices. in the end, i can make any speaker sound good.
i used the miniDSP 2x8 digi as active crossover and equalizer.
minidsp12 333-15khz > dac > amp > full range
minidsp34 55 - 333hz > dac > amp > mid
minidsp56 18 to 45hz > dac > amp > sub
minidsp78 > stereo mix > dac > headphone amp
IMO for surround speakers. do not 2 way. find a nice full range and use multiple per channel.then use the dsp for equalization.
http://www.parts-express.com/dayton-audio-ps95-8-3-1-2-point-source-full-range-driver-8-ohm--295-349
http://www.parts-express.com/dayton-audio-rs100-8-4-reference-full-range-driver--295-352
http://www.parts-express.com/dayton...ce-full-range-driver-truncated-frame--295-336
ex.
https://www.minidsp.com/
a DSP (Digital Sound Processor)
it allows you to offload the signal into software. it is limited to the processing power of the device.
there is a crossover plugin.
there is a eq plugin
there is a room correction plugin.
there is a etc plugin
you can mix and match plugins. the capabilities are endless as long as you stay within the limit of the cpu
so for 5.1 you need a 2 channel amp and 2 channel dsp per channel
i ran down this rabbit hole for the fine tuning ability.
i ended up with a custom DAC for each range.
i stuck with two channel cos of many devices. in the end, i can make any speaker sound good.
i used the miniDSP 2x8 digi as active crossover and equalizer.
minidsp12 333-15khz > dac > amp > full range
minidsp34 55 - 333hz > dac > amp > mid
minidsp56 18 to 45hz > dac > amp > sub
minidsp78 > stereo mix > dac > headphone amp
IMO for surround speakers. do not 2 way. find a nice full range and use multiple per channel.then use the dsp for equalization.
http://www.parts-express.com/dayton-audio-ps95-8-3-1-2-point-source-full-range-driver-8-ohm--295-349
http://www.parts-express.com/dayton-audio-rs100-8-4-reference-full-range-driver--295-352
http://www.parts-express.com/dayton...ce-full-range-driver-truncated-frame--295-336
ex.
https://www.minidsp.com/
a DSP (Digital Sound Processor)
it allows you to offload the signal into software. it is limited to the processing power of the device.
there is a crossover plugin.
there is a eq plugin
there is a room correction plugin.
there is a etc plugin
you can mix and match plugins. the capabilities are endless as long as you stay within the limit of the cpu
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to answer your question. i'm sure there are lots of people who have already found the xo/sweetspot for those speakers.
I prefer 8 ohm. the 4 ohm are design towards car audio use.
http://www.htguide.com/forum/showthread.php?28655-A-Guide-to-HTguide-com-Completed-Speaker-Designs
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/mult...dayton-rs180-seas-27tbfc-2-way-bookshelf.html
I prefer 8 ohm. the 4 ohm are design towards car audio use.
http://www.htguide.com/forum/showthread.php?28655-A-Guide-to-HTguide-com-Completed-Speaker-Designs
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/mult...dayton-rs180-seas-27tbfc-2-way-bookshelf.html
Which one of these better Mid-Woofer for 3-way design Home Theatre speakers and why?
I am confused between this two driver. Please help me to decide between the mention below two Mid-woofer -
1. Dayton Audio RS100P-8":
Specification Link: RS100P-8 4" Reference Paper Midwoofer 8 Ohm Specification Sheet
2. Dayton Audio RS125T-8 5":
Specification Link: RS125T-8 5" Reference Woofer Truncated Frame 8 Ohm Specification Sheet
I am confused between this two driver. Please help me to decide between the mention below two Mid-woofer -
1. Dayton Audio RS100P-8":
Specification Link: RS100P-8 4" Reference Paper Midwoofer 8 Ohm Specification Sheet
2. Dayton Audio RS125T-8 5":
Specification Link: RS125T-8 5" Reference Woofer Truncated Frame 8 Ohm Specification Sheet
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