So I would say I am still a novice...and I have come to this conclusion through a lot of practice. Basically at this point I think I have a good understanding of speakers/acoustics but as with most my EE skills are deplorable at best.
I used a stock dayton crossover for my first project, they aren't bad but not what I want really want. I put a lpad on the tweeter and actually ended up changing out the vifa tweeter for a dayton silk dome.
I was looking at active crossovers so I could tune (with in room response) the speakers to my liking then build a passive based on those values but this talks to a bigger disconnect.
I have no clue about speaker measurement enough to know what type of db slope, 1st, 2nd, 3rd order L/R, Butterworth, Bisquick freakin crossover I actually need. Because of this I actually had a hard time picking drivers as well. If I am going to make the next step I need to understand this and I think if I go with SpeakerWorkshop/Soundeasy/HOLMImpulse or any of these types of software it won't matter because I won't know the output I am getting or the results won't mean anything to me.
So...to understand the 12d/b 18d/b slopes and the correct type of crossover to choose for a given design and to properly use the acoustic measurement software where should I start that is easy to understand?
Also I want real measurements, not so much simulations. I want to setup a mic in a room or in a car and be able to tune the speakers as best possible. I almost pulled the trigger on the OmniMic last night but I wanted to ask you guys to see if that would even be worth it if I didn't have the theory behind it.
I used a stock dayton crossover for my first project, they aren't bad but not what I want really want. I put a lpad on the tweeter and actually ended up changing out the vifa tweeter for a dayton silk dome.
I was looking at active crossovers so I could tune (with in room response) the speakers to my liking then build a passive based on those values but this talks to a bigger disconnect.
I have no clue about speaker measurement enough to know what type of db slope, 1st, 2nd, 3rd order L/R, Butterworth, Bisquick freakin crossover I actually need. Because of this I actually had a hard time picking drivers as well. If I am going to make the next step I need to understand this and I think if I go with SpeakerWorkshop/Soundeasy/HOLMImpulse or any of these types of software it won't matter because I won't know the output I am getting or the results won't mean anything to me.
So...to understand the 12d/b 18d/b slopes and the correct type of crossover to choose for a given design and to properly use the acoustic measurement software where should I start that is easy to understand?
Also I want real measurements, not so much simulations. I want to setup a mic in a room or in a car and be able to tune the speakers as best possible. I almost pulled the trigger on the OmniMic last night but I wanted to ask you guys to see if that would even be worth it if I didn't have the theory behind it.
If you want to have some people help you learn about speaker design, then this is probably not the best forum. I can suggest that you start hanging around the Parts-Express Tech-Talk forum:
Techtalk Speaker Building, Audio, Video Discussion Forum
There are some DIY resources that you can read about measurements and crossover design that I host on my web site:
audio.claub.net: software
This is a very good read by Jeff Bagby about doing accurate measurements yourself:
http://audio.claub.net/software/FRD...curate In-Room Frequency Response to 10Hz.pdf
You are at the beginning of a long learning curve that most of us are still one to one extent or another, but luckily you can have a lot of fun and make some good speakers along the way.
Techtalk Speaker Building, Audio, Video Discussion Forum
There are some DIY resources that you can read about measurements and crossover design that I host on my web site:
audio.claub.net: software
This is a very good read by Jeff Bagby about doing accurate measurements yourself:
http://audio.claub.net/software/FRD...curate In-Room Frequency Response to 10Hz.pdf
You are at the beginning of a long learning curve that most of us are still one to one extent or another, but luckily you can have a lot of fun and make some good speakers along the way.
So...to understand the 12d/b 18d/b slopes and the correct type of crossover to choose for a given design and to properly use the acoustic measurement software where should I start that is easy to understand?
You shouldn't believe people such Lynn Olson and others 😛
They're always talking about freakin' levels of volume playing
to very delicate devices 😀
1st order might be ok for starting, since you get a little closer with the devices themselves...that's the title of the thread, right ?
You're decision of changing the drivers wasn't following the previous period you wrote, which assumed that you knew that the crossover was wrong !
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