High dynamic range 104mm dome tweeter?

Hi,

I'm looking for a high dynamic range dome tweeter in a standard 104mm faceplate.

I need something that hits 110dB/1m without dynamic range compression. ie. no loss in output when compared to 80dB@1m.
Needs to be able to cross around 2KHz- 2.5KHz with 3rd order electrical filter.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cbdb
Thanks for your response Ben,

That Morel should be a fantastic tweeter, thanks for the suggestion. Before I go importing it, is there anything from the ScanSpeak or Tymphany or SB Acoustics stable that might also do it? There are available locally to me.

My current tweeter shows 2dB of compression at 96dB, and 4dB of compression at 106dB. (it's the double magnet ring radiator from V/P)

Is there a spec that I should be looking for, or do I need to measure it to know for sure?
 
Perhaps a good 1 inch format compression driver and little round horn such as Eminence's APT80 ? - that might do ok



I use K-tubes - there's an inexpensive PRV ring radiator one inch format compression which would drive one as well or better than DE250 B&C. A CAT 37-8 is pretty much a toy for your desired levels. Maybe an array per Tekton.

 
Last edited:
Thanks for your response Ben,
Is there a spec that I should be looking for, or do I need to measure it to know for sure?
Like Zvu posted, the HiFiCompass measurements are likely the only place you'll find the data. However, I know the Morels are good for a 1mm Xmax. I'm thinking they are in the 93-94dB range for sensitivity.

I thought about the Bliessma as well as the Satori Be, and the H26 has the output to likely get there. These all were on my mind too.
 
  • Thank You
Reactions: tktran303
Here's the system output at 2.83V.

1652127406672.png


I've used a 100ms time window because I wanted to see to see the total system output. So that includes a bit of room effect.

Here's the system output at various SPL levels @1m. normalized to the 86dB output. The top-most green line represents 2.83V input.

1652127938441.png



The dynamic compression is above the M-T XO frequency, which made me wonder, it is suspension limited?
At 10Khz-20Khz, it doesn't need a lot of x-max.

Here's the distortion data, derived from the REW's (default) log sine sweep method.
For those not familiar with REW, the fundamental and all distortion components are 1/24 octave smoothed.

1652128772387.png


The tweeter is clearly being pushed hard since it's now >1% H2 distortion.
So is this limitation due to suspension or thermal limits?

Compression drivers and horns may be needed, but that's a rabbit hole I'm not yet ready to go in.
 
Last edited:
Yes that is a solution- 4 tweeters per midrange; I was hoping I could avoid that.

I will do some modelling and see what happens with dispersion with 4 vertically aligned tweeters beside the midrange. What happens to the polar response and do the tweeters need some shading?
 
Having 1% or >1% distortion is no indication of tweeter stress. I know of no compression driver (regardless of price) that shows less that 1% HD2 at even 95dB/1W/1m. But all higher order harmonics must be low.

Talk about Xmax of the tweeter is solid but so are the measurements. Satori i posted doesn't show serious stress signs 2kHz+ even at higest measuring voltage in distortion measurements - and that's where you'd see the effect of not enough linear travel. It has Xmax of 0.25mm

So, if you don't have the time/money for experimenting, Yevgeniy has pretty good data base and he measured at higher volumes. I'd look for something available there.

I made comparisons of some measured distortion in compression drivers here:

https://www.audiosciencereview.com/...367-review-by-erin.32689/page-12#post-1153390

If it's just 2nd harmonic that is high, that is not thermal compression. In thermal compression all harmonics jump drastically.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Thank You
Reactions: GM and tktran303