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#1 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
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Hi everyone!
is there any room gain in case of dipole woofer? I have searched the forum and found nothing conclusive, just some quotes from Linkwitz suggesting that there is no room gain and a post from GM suggesting that there is and that it has been measured in case of actual speakers (Carver Amazing in a small room - "room-gain effect (...) like +8dB at 20 Hz.") see: http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showt...89#post1550689 so I wonder how it is actually can anyone help? best! graaf |
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#2 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: US
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It depends on what you mean by room gain. If you mean the room pressurization below the room fundamental then essentially there is none. If you mean in crease in efficiency do to proximity to wall, corners, etc, then yes there is.
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John k.... Music and Design NaO Dipole Loudspeakers. |
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#3 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Germany
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"The room is so small that in order to get adequate stereo separation, Foster had to arrange the speakers with the ribbons on the outside, swapping left and right speakers. Moran found the bass overpowering and measured the room-gain effect as producing something like +8dB at 20 Hz. Moran thought it was bit too much of a good thing."
I donīt believe that those 8 dB really were room-gain. The Carver Amazing had a built-in middle-to-bass gain: ![]() You should also consider that the Carver was 135 cm high and almost 70 cm wide. Most likely it had to be positioned near some walls in that "small room". In this case John Ks remark applies. Anyway the forum seems to be one step ahead of you. The real question lately was: "Is there any room gain at all in normal rooms?"
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www.dipolplus.de |
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#4 | |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
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Quote:
thank You very much for Your response best! graaf |
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#5 | |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
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Quote:
I don't think questioning room gain as such is "ahead" of anyone anyway if "John Ks remark applies" then there is room gain as I understand it and as it is commonly understood AFAIK frankly I am surprised that people are confusing room gain with pressurization below Schroeder frequency best! graaf |
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#6 |
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diyAudio Moderator
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I dunno... seems that when you reach a certain Sd that there starts to be room gain. 2 x15" driver per side seems to be about the threashold in a normal size listening room.
Could be wrong, but something seems to happen....
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Take the Speaker Voltage Test! |
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#7 |
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diyAudio Member
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I did measurement far field at listening position, approximately 3m from speakers, in room. Where in this graph is the "room gain" ?
Speakers are Eminence 15 based dipole with 45cm baffle, equalised at lower frequency. The room is a bit long (about 80-10m) ![]() is it around 100Hz? I forgot at what freq. it is being equalised (shelving lowpass) but if aroung 150Hz then shouldn't it look like s smooth transition instead of "hump"
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http://gainphile.blogspot.com |
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#8 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: UK
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When running my OB with 15"+18" LF drivers they become as susceptible to room positioning as do monopoles because the room itself remains capable of generating different levels of dimensionally tuned augmentation at different places/heights, it being similar for the listening position.
The main difference is that the room itself does not become LF pressurised, thus ceiling, floor and walls do not provide the same LF resonant gain at specific frequencies which are related to structural construction (as with boom-boom in a car!). When you hear live music in open space you do not sense an explosive like LF pressure pulse the same as you do with monopoles within an enclosed room space, and the smaller the room the greater the abnormality of relative increase in sensed LF monopolar pressure for equal mid range level seems to become apparent. Dipoles don't induce the enclosed room pressure pulse, thus I do not understand how there can be any room gain if the room itself is rigidly and solidly constructed, and I believe this is why dipole reproduction can seem so correctly articulated, even at LF. Hi Michael, When cone/baffle area increases maybe there is a greater chance of exciting a room mode due to the localised pressure differential at the LS position ? Cheers ....... Graham. |
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#9 |
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diyAudio Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: none
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gainphile:
Is that measurement offset? You're getting an equalized ~135dB from 30hz on up on an 18" baffle? Which driver? How many? What sort of room? |
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#10 |
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diyAudio Member
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Yes, ignore the dB. I did not calibrate the SPL.
Driver is Eminence Alpha which is 97dB.
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