gedlee said:
Frank
Thanks for taking this on. I refuse to deal with such foolishness.
The 80 dB limit is quite correct, and stated in the paper. above this point requires FDA approval and a whole array of added and expensive requirements. Thus we were limited to testing at what is really a very low level. Since the data ALL showed a significant trend towards higher audibility at higher SPLs, there is no doubt that at some point any level of HOM will be audible.
How could You as an academic be that insultant?
80dB IS loud as can be seen imediatly from the fact that is not allowed to test human beings at this level. To speculate from findings at that level to higher ones is as non scientific as can be. We know to much of saturation effects, masking etc to dare extarpolations.
HOM as an explanation for the bad in audio remains a speculation that hasn't been proved as being perceptable. At least with recent devices as 18s XT1086 and the like. Not to forget the one that this thread has been started with, JBL el'cheepo:
Geddes:
"..., it is a diffraction horn. It acts just like every other diffraction horn that I have measured ...
From the noise signal I could tell that it was very resonant and the data shows that quite clearly.
... but I'm not about to tell you that it good quality. The results speak for themselves."
A horn with +/- 1dB ripple condemned as sounding resonant, bad, no good quality. From a subjective listening test in the lab with noise unequalized.
doug20 said:
The message overall is pretty clear, I don't dwell on how the message is present to long because if its valid I want to learn from it.
Doug
I'm glad its coming through. Its been a lifetime project and passion so I take it very seriously.
doug20 said:I didnt understand that even what I consider to be small ripples (dips/peaks) in the response could be audible.
And most importantly, uncorrectable.
xpert said:
A horn with +/- 1dB ripple condemned as sounding resonant, bad, no good quality. From a subjective listening test in the lab with noise unequalized.
There was no listening.
I'm not suggesting that's wrong, just clarifying that it didn't happen.
If there is coloration, however, it's clearly not so massive as implied, given that only two parties who have never heard it assert that it sounds like a horn, whereas the many who HAVE heard it affirm it doesn't.
This is subjective, of course, and by definition, dangerous territory, best avoided. 😉
gedlee said:
And most importantly, uncorrectable.
But mitigable by a reticulated foam plug.... 🙂
ZilchLab said:
But by reticulated foam plug, perhaps.... 🙂
Proper design does a lot and the "open cell" foam plug does a lot together they minimize the HOM to a point not heard before. I should have said "electronically" - thats what is missing.
Well you asked for it 🙂
gedlee said:
Well you asked for it 🙂
We're where I want to be -- $3000 vs. $200 for HOM angels on a pin.
I'll send you more to measure in a couple of weeks; in the meantime, you can be working up a new argument.
[Use something better than ESP12 for comparison this time, though, would you please...? 😀 ]
ZilchLab said:
We're where I want to be -- $3000 vs. $200 for HOM angels on a pin.
I'll send you more to measure in a couple of weeks; in the meantime, you can be working up a new argument.
[Use something better than ESP12 for comparison this time, though, would you please...? 😀 ]
I have no idea what you are talking about.
This HOMs and diffraction are all audible effects as well as measurable. This is not to say that everone knows how to interpret the data or can hear the effects. They gould be burried in the room modes, driver decay, and other forms of imperfection of greater significance. It would be much appreciated if you can point us to, or show here some of your own work rather than trying to get people to talk using provoking remarks. It does not show you know more than geddes.xpert said:
How could You as an academic be that insultant?
80dB IS loud as can be seen imediatly from the fact that is not allowed to test human beings at this level. To speculate from findings at that level to higher ones is as non scientific as can be. We know to much of saturation effects, masking etc to dare extarpolations.
HOM as an explanation for the bad in audio remains a speculation that hasn't been proved as being perceptable. At least with recent devices as 18s XT1086 and the like. Not to forget the one that this thread has been started with, JBL el'cheepo:
Geddes:
"..., it is a diffraction horn. It acts just like every other diffraction horn that I have measured ...
From the noise signal I could tell that it was very resonant and the data shows that quite clearly.
... but I'm not about to tell you that it good quality. The results speak for themselves."
A horn with +/- 1dB ripple condemned as sounding resonant, bad, no good quality. From a subjective listening test in the lab with noise unequalized.
soongsc said:It would be much appreciated if you can point us to, or show here some of your own work rather than trying to get people to talk using provoking remarks.
Oh the irony. 🙄
Wish ppl would knock it off plz.
soongsc said:
This HOMs and diffraction are all audible effects as well as measurable.
Oh? Show us, please, the HOMs particularly. I'd like to see the little devils.
[Or their tracks, at least.... 😉 ]
A part of it I have already explained in the Geddess thread. Sorry, can't lend you my old ears to let you hear them.😉ZilchLab said:
Oh? Show us, please, the HOMs particularly. I'd like to see the little devils.
[Or their tracks, at least.... 😉 ]
Aw, c'mon Zilch. I respect you but all the sly attacks against Earl are getting old. Maybe this is HOMs and maybe it isn't. Paul W measured a DDS waveguide with and without foam, with the mic near the edge of the waveguide. Top trace is the signal and bottom is what the mic picks up.
Without foam:
With foam:
Without foam:
With foam:
soongsc said:
A part of it I have already explained in the Geddess thread. Sorry, can't lend you my old ears to let you hear them.😉
How about providing a link as a courtesy, perhaps?
Given the plethora of profuse HOM generators I have on hand, I should be able to see some.
Otherwise, we are confounded with a conundrum here.... 🙂
If you want a simpler view of higher order modes, one place to look is a book on microwave theory, where much of this has been addressed for decades. In essence, they can also be modeled as EM waves bouncing in conductive pipes. Some terminology to watch out for:
In microwave theory, the term waveguide generally refers to a tube which guides EM waves, although optical fibers and even wires carrying DC can be modeled as waveguides (it is an interesting way to prove that a wire can guide power at 0Hz, i.e. DC, BTW).
Audio horns and waveguides would all be considered as different types of horn antennae.
One of the more important effects of HOM in microwave theory is dispersion, i.e. different frequencies have different propagation velocities. A free space analog would be multipath distortion (remember ghosting on analog TVs?)They can be a problem in wide bandwidth systems, and limit the information carrying capacity of a channel.
While I can't comment on the audibility of HOM personally, they are a real and known issues in EM theory, which also deals with wave propagation.
Study up,
John
In microwave theory, the term waveguide generally refers to a tube which guides EM waves, although optical fibers and even wires carrying DC can be modeled as waveguides (it is an interesting way to prove that a wire can guide power at 0Hz, i.e. DC, BTW).
Audio horns and waveguides would all be considered as different types of horn antennae.
One of the more important effects of HOM in microwave theory is dispersion, i.e. different frequencies have different propagation velocities. A free space analog would be multipath distortion (remember ghosting on analog TVs?)They can be a problem in wide bandwidth systems, and limit the information carrying capacity of a channel.
While I can't comment on the audibility of HOM personally, they are a real and known issues in EM theory, which also deals with wave propagation.
Study up,
John
catapult said:Aw, c'mon Zilch. I respect you but all the sly attacks against Earl are getting old.
I am not attacking Earl, his products, or his design principles here; what's old is others suggesting that I am. Put me in the "Advocates" column, as I endure plenty of trashing for being one elsewhere. I have paid my dues.
Originally posted by catapult Maybe this is HOMs and maybe it isn't. Paul W measured a DDS waveguide with and without foam, with the mic near the edge of the waveguide.
Link us to the study, please.
That's the Engebretson? Do we conclude it's not a "Waveguide" from this finding?
FYI
http://www.gedlee.com/downloads/Sound Quality Improvements in Compression Driver Systems.pdf
You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink.
http://www.gedlee.com/downloads/Sound Quality Improvements in Compression Driver Systems.pdf
You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink.
ZilchLab said:
I am not attacking Earl, his products, or his design principles here; what's old is others suggesting that I am. Put me in the "Advocates" column, as I endure plenty of trashing for being one elsewhere. I have paid my dues.
Link us to the study, please.
That's the Engebretson? Do we conclude it's not a "Waveguide" from this finding?
http://www.htguide.com/forum/showthread.php4?p=329361
I don't know what an Engebretson is. I think the only thing we can conclude is that foam makes the impulse response look better with the mic in that particular location with that particular horn. It does lend a bit of credence to the notion that reflections inside a horn are a Bad Thing (Martha.) 😉
Took a while to dig through the pile, but here it is:ZilchLab said:
How about providing a link as a courtesy, perhaps?
Given the plethora of profuse HOM generators I have on hand, I should be able to see some.
Otherwise, we are confounded with a conundrum here.... 🙂
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=1774677#post1774677
May I ask what kind of original signal is being used? If it's generated from SoundEasy, it sure looks very different from what I usually see on various systems.catapult said:Aw, c'mon Zilch. I respect you but all the sly attacks against Earl are getting old. Maybe this is HOMs and maybe it isn't. Paul W measured a DDS waveguide with and without foam, with the mic near the edge of the waveguide. Top trace is the signal and bottom is what the mic picks up.
Without foam:![]()
With foam:![]()
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