Audio Project Amplifier Speaker Loudspeaker Kit
diyAudio.com diyAudio Forums Archive > Top > Source > Digital
 
digital compensation to make loudspeaker transient perfect - Click HERE for Original Thread
mazurek
I was wondering if anyone around these parts knows anything about how to make inverse allpass compensation filters on the computer.

I was thinking about the harsh driver requirements necessary to minimize group delay effects for high spl systems, my current loudspeakers are three ways using LR24 acoustic slopes. Lower slopes to minimize group delay will push the drivers out of their preferred bandwidth.

A phaseless DSP crossover solution is beyond my means, but my analog LR24 crossovers are cascaded 2nd order allpass. It seems to me that one should be able to take an ordinary well designed loudspeaker, and apply digital correction for the 2nd order allpasses, and result in a transient perfect loudspeaker.

I have a Emu 1616M, I'm not sure what it entails to program digital filters for the thing. I have a copy of Matlab that I can use to generate filter coefficients, but I'm not quite sure what I am doing.

Anyone have any information on the subject?

Thanks,
Lee
theAnonymous1
www.thuneau.com
mazurek
Thanks! Looks like exactly what I want.

Page generated in 0.016262054443359 seconds with 17 queries,
spending 0.00555229 doing MySQL queries and 0.01070976 doing PHP things.

Powered by: Search Engine Indexer and vBulletin
Copyright ©1999-2009 diyAudio.com

Please support our sponsor.