Resessed midrange/woofer

What's the purpose of the recessed midrange some manufacturers do?
Small waveguide?
Only for looks?
Anyone tried it?

1000015693.jpg
1000015692.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Most of the speakers I've seen have only the midrange or both midrange and the tweeter recessed.
To get the tweeter time and phase alignment isn't it a bad thing to only move the midrange further back?
Long story short...The primary reasons usually revolve around time and phase alignment, as well as improving the overall frequency response and directivity, also help with smoothing edge diffraction... IMHO

It would be very interesting to see measurements, anyone who wants to share?
 
Nice. Cardboard and painters tape is DIY at its best. Fastest Way to iterate.

Though there is some change on the graph, I think it would be even better if you could run the test with no lowpass on the woofers and add gating so you remove reflections from the room.
 
  • Like
Reactions: GM
If they're all recessed, maybe it's to give the drivers a little protection?
That is the most important aspect of it. The cones and dome are ceramic, very hard and stiff but also very thin and very fragile, even a slight light push can shatter them. They are recessed further than the acoustic advantage of a small WG would require. While sounding very precise and having an excellent resolution, that's why I will never buy some of these. Several models went already out of production and you can't get a replacement anymore. There are several reports and photos especially of the bass drivers which shattered just by playing music.
 
  • Thank You
Reactions: GM
I remember reading a diffraction study that showed all the possible 3D shapes, starting with a square, rounded corners, etc. the least diffraction was from a sphere with an inset driver. I’ve seen other studies where tear drop prisms with depressed drivers had great dispersion. I don’t know who did the studies but they float around the forums. Probably over in full range?
 
I have tried it several years ago and didn't find any particular reason to use it other than estetics.
Diffraction plagues my designs too, but basically only for the tweeter, but with a very shallow waveguide of just 4 mm thickness and the outer diameter of the mounting plate of 100-110 mm the diffraction basically disappeared.
Edges of cabinet rounded with a radius of 22 mm. Baffle width 250 mm.
That shallow wave guide helped a lot to get all parts of the dome, even the tip below the surface of the baffle.
An annoying -2,5 dB dip in 2-4 kHz region vanished completely.

A bit similar to Rockports tweeter recession but a mm or two less deep, and a cm or so less in diameter.
Very effective at preventing diffraction.
 

Attachments

  • Like
Reactions: Arthur Jackson
As mentioned above, there can be reasons such as time-alignment and diffraction. More often useful for the tweeter, especially if combined with a waveguide.

But a it is especially common with rear-mounted drivers, which inevitably have some thickness of baffle in front of them. Chamfering or rounding the corners of the baffle's hole reduces the diffraction that they would cause. Mostly effective on the higher frequencies, and can again include waveguide shapes. But there is a lot of variation; rear mounting is often just a kind of aesthetic thing, to hide screws and ugly driver frames, not always thought through from an acoustic angle.

In some cases a similar effect can be caused even on a flush mounted driver. If a grill-frame is then added to the front of the baffle, not dissimilar to Shure's cardboard tests above.