As I posted before, almost all cabinet vibrations are caused by the reaction forces of the cone/VC assembly accelerating and braking.
Blah, blah, blah. You don't listen carefully. Ported cabs and sealed cabs sound different in the time domain, its not enough that the frequency domain measures okay.
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RNMarsh said:?? I have many times. One was how to lower speaker driver distortion with only one resistor added to PA.
-RNM
Maybe you missed my question:
Could you give a link to the one resistor distortion reducer.
Hans
Seems like a lot of text book knowledge though. For quite some years now, analog circuit design has become a collection of 'black boxes' interconnected in various ways for the end result. Less and less discrete designs.
The end result is fewer choices and all perform much the same. just features and cost is remaining issues for sales.
I know cell phones should still be in a small suit case and cost $5000, and computers should fill a room, cost $1M, and require liquid cooling. What makes you think all these IC's are nothing but "book learning" wielded by a bunch interchangeable disposable engineers?
Sorry to inform you that many of these folks are brilliant and these circuits are full of tricks that you would never understand. Some are "specialists" I guess in your eyes too bad for them, they probably don't blow dry their cars either.
Finally, something to talk about. Loudspeaker enclosure resonance.
Now here is an example of where most engineers fail to completely fix a serious potential problem.
Looking at the illustration of the inside of the rather complex JBL speaker that Richard Marsh owns, and has used in the past, and that Markw4 has use of at this time, it is not surprising that some resonant tendencies might develop somewhere.
Most people really ignore this problem with loudspeaker cabinets, and manufacturers sometimes even try to suppress any criticism of their efforts in this area. Hey, it is expensive to really control resonance in most loudspeaker cabinets. It is NOT just choice of material or even its thickness, although both can be factors.
Often a stiffer material or a thicker material just raises the RESONANT FREQUENCY and does little or nothing to reduce its Q. This is not intuitive, at least to me.
Back 55 years ago, when we made the Grateful Dead cabinets, we used the stiffest and the thickest (readily available) Birch plywood that is almost like cement when you banged into it (usually by accident '-) ) and we were pretty smug about it. Later, 50 years ago
I attended an AES conference in London where I heard several papers on the subject. Yes, we had overlooked several factors. Our cabinets were big, heavy, and strong (resistant to breakage) but they still resonated at a pretty high Q. Live and learn folks!
My reference speaker is especially designed for low Q resonance, but even it most probably has some measurable, (and perhaps audible) resonances. I shudder at what most of you out there put up with.
Secondly, Richard Marsh is right. Most input here is just small talk, and most here are not very informative in a useful way to improve audio quality. Real engineers like 'tricks and tips' on how to do something better.
Now here is an example of where most engineers fail to completely fix a serious potential problem.
Looking at the illustration of the inside of the rather complex JBL speaker that Richard Marsh owns, and has used in the past, and that Markw4 has use of at this time, it is not surprising that some resonant tendencies might develop somewhere.
Most people really ignore this problem with loudspeaker cabinets, and manufacturers sometimes even try to suppress any criticism of their efforts in this area. Hey, it is expensive to really control resonance in most loudspeaker cabinets. It is NOT just choice of material or even its thickness, although both can be factors.
Often a stiffer material or a thicker material just raises the RESONANT FREQUENCY and does little or nothing to reduce its Q. This is not intuitive, at least to me.
Back 55 years ago, when we made the Grateful Dead cabinets, we used the stiffest and the thickest (readily available) Birch plywood that is almost like cement when you banged into it (usually by accident '-) ) and we were pretty smug about it. Later, 50 years ago
I attended an AES conference in London where I heard several papers on the subject. Yes, we had overlooked several factors. Our cabinets were big, heavy, and strong (resistant to breakage) but they still resonated at a pretty high Q. Live and learn folks!
My reference speaker is especially designed for low Q resonance, but even it most probably has some measurable, (and perhaps audible) resonances. I shudder at what most of you out there put up with.
Secondly, Richard Marsh is right. Most input here is just small talk, and most here are not very informative in a useful way to improve audio quality. Real engineers like 'tricks and tips' on how to do something better.
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Often a stiffer material or a thicker material just raises the RESONANT FREQUENCY and does little or nothing to reduce its Q.
That's why I mentioned damping too. The drawing JBL released doesn't necessarily show everything.
IIRC, SL, when he was still into cabinets, reckoned 4" to be the maximum distance between bracing.
These are my speakers, pretty well "braced" 😉 http://www.ejjordan.co.uk/PDFs/Eikona_2_VTL.pdf
These are my speakers, pretty well "braced" 😉 http://www.ejjordan.co.uk/PDFs/Eikona_2_VTL.pdf
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You can write about whatever is in your own mind. DIY Audio doesn't care.You can write whatever you want. I do not care.
You have no contribution in DIY audio, only jealous to people who success in audio business.
It starts to become annoying however when these so called “real engineers” never disclose their own findings in detail but keep asking others for their solutions.Richard Marsh is right. Most input here is just small talk, and most here are not very informative in a useful way to improve audio quality. Real engineers like 'tricks and tips' on how to do something better.
Hans
IIRC, SL, when he was still into cabinets, reckoned 4" to be the maximum distance between bracing.
These are my speakers, pretty well "braced" 😉 http://www.ejjordan.co.uk/PDFs/Eikona_2_VTL.pdf
How efficient are those?
This has something to do with my post you quoted? Ah, of course, in your opinion and readers know that you are biased for your audio business.It's time that you learn what the terms "false positives" and "false negatives" really mean. It has nothing to do with "playbooks" or "audio business" but is just a matter of statistical hypothesis testing.
Therefore it came up again wrt fMRI and/or Pet-Scans, as both are used as a diagnosis tool for severe illness.
One wants to avoid both errors, the false positives as it might lead to totally unnecessary treatments/interventions and the false negatives as it might lead to undertreatment.
And therefore the Benjamini/Hochberg correction method could be helpful as it lowers the rate of false negatives.
You have to educate yourself to avoid the constant fooling yourself in the future, and - as said before - reading opinion papers by Peter Aczel do not help. You need a good solid introductory textbook on statistical hypothesis testing and inference, if you need some recommendations just ask. 🙂
These can be used in constrained-layer damping (CLD)
It has been posted several times in the past:It is NOT just choice of material or even its thickness, although both can be factors.
Often a stiffer material or a thicker material just raises the RESONANT FREQUENCY and does little or nothing to reduce its Q. This is not intuitive, at least to me.
http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/rd/pubs/reports/1977-03.pdf
also this regarding size of enclosure http://www.keith-snook.info/wireles...ld-1980/An acoustically small loudspeaker.pdf
Have you ever paid a visit to loudspeakers threads to see how people build their speakers (and why they do it)?I shudder at what most of you out there put up with.
George
“Secondly, Richard Marsh is right. Most input here is just small talk, and most here are not very informative in a useful way to improve audio quality. Real engineers like 'tricks and tips' on how to do something better.”
There you again JC. Talking down to everyone.
There you again JC. Talking down to everyone.
Richards trick is really neat. I ha e some B&W 703’s a d I’m going to try that tonight ( I have some heavy quilts I’ll use - no shipping blankets to hand).
The 703’s are reasonably well braced but it will be interesting to see what I come up with.
The 703’s are reasonably well braced but it will be interesting to see what I come up with.
He hears everything he wants to in his own listening method. 😉25mm MDF, at what point does it start flexing and, more to the point, can you hear it?
Like praising for Bybee Quantum Purifiers and cable lifters?and most here are not very informative in a useful way to improve audio quality.
I personally don't use cable lifters, but I am open to anyone who does. Bybee, Bybee, Bybee! That is the call to ultimate tweakdom!
from my point of view it started because people were not interested in finding out if perceptable differnences exist but instead were deeply convinced that no audible differences should exist.
Yes, your very own, private POV; as far as I recall, short of some misunderstandings due to loose control of the discourse, nobody said here that "no audible differences should exist". Do I need to say "FUD" again?
What was said is:
1. If we can hear it, then we can measure it; the thesis of audible but unmeasurable differences is bollocks.
2. We don't give a hoot if there are two persons in Myanmar that can hear X; there are people known to be able to see Mars satellites Deimos and Phobos bare eyed, so what? It's the psychoacoustic researcher duty to prove his results are of relevance and to specify the scope of the population it applies to.
...and how about some of yours -exchange being robbery?
That would be in fact "self admitted robbery" of ideas coming from "disposable engineers".
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Blah, blah, blah. You don't listen carefully. Ported cabs and sealed cabs sound different in the time domain, its not enough that the frequency domain measures okay.
In the time domain, sealed is 6dB/octave better. Better. Your point was that with the pipe stuffed, panel vibrations were worse. So thanks to your latest contribution we now know that stuffed is both better in the time domain and as far as panel vibratrions are concerned.
If you have any technical contribution to add, please do. My expose was quite to the point, so if you have further points to make, please do.
Apart from that: Who for Wohan Flue's sake are you to blame me for not listening carefully!!
Edit: 6dB in terms of phase shift, made a large step there.
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Your point was that with the pipe stuffed, panel vibrations were worse.
No, that was not my point. My point was that it was too blurry sounding not stuffed. Stuffing did not entirely correct the issue. Hence, I would like even more vibration control, that vibration is the only factor under consideration.
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