In a 3-way design, if the crossover point for midrange was selected around 200-2,500 Hz, what is the different between using 4 and 6 inches driver? As the frequency response of both drivers can be covered totally in that range. Thanks in advance
Distortion in a 4" will be higher on the lower side of the spectrum. And xmax, and so volume wil be more limited. But it all depends on the drivers used, the application and the power needed. For high-power pa purpose i would use a 12" or 15" in that spectrum, for a small low power hifi speaker a 4" or even smaller (2 or 3") can do the job. In general, the more db you want, the bigger the speaker must be. But bigger means less directive and more problems with break up modes that get lower.
Any reason for that choice? Those points don't go well together, you'll be either power constrained or suffering from mismatched dispersion. If you use a 6.5" mid lower to 2KHz the upper crossover point, if you use a 5.25" mid increase to 400Hz the lower crossover point.In a 3-way design, if the crossover point for midrange was selected around 200-2,500 Hz
Ralf
Yesterday someone pointed at the Axiom brand
I see there's a 3 way with 6.5 " woofer and 5.25" midrange
M5HP Bookshelf Speakers | Axiom Audio
I see there's a 3 way with 6.5 " woofer and 5.25" midrange
M5HP Bookshelf Speakers | Axiom Audio
Have you seen the 5" FaitalPro drivers? Really a good combnation of high power, and high frequency extension.
Have you seen the 5" FaitalPro drivers? Really a good combnation of high power, and high frequency extension.
That Faital 5" 5FE series is indeed a good candidate for this frequency band. Faital in general makes great drivers
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