PH2380 alternative

Hi! I have been living a while now with a speaker consisting of FaitalPro HF206 mounted to a PH2380 horn, crossed at 600hz to a FaitalPro 15PR400. I'm using a minDSP 2x4 HD for crossover and EQ.

The point of this speaker was to be confident that my system could handle full THX reference level. At high levels the horn sometimes sounds really resonant, and especially deep male voice are recreated horribly bad. Distortion at high frequency is also very evident even at 10-15db below reference levels.

So now i'm trying to decide whether i should try a different horn, like the Eminence H2EA, or if i should buy a good midrange, like the Scan-speak 15m Discovery and make it a 3-way with a 27TFFC i have lying around.

Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
 
Thanks, I'll try raising the XO. I've been using LR24.

However it measures pretty clean distortion-wise down to 4-500Hz up to pretty high levels. The measured distortion is mostly in the 1-2k and above 5k-area. Maybe it's intermodular distortion thats causing the issue?
 
Attatched is a measurement taken about 1m from the speaker on tweeter level. XO is 800Hz@LR48. Driver integration is better when measured further away, but this is to show the distortion i'm concerned about. I suspect it is causing the harshness at high levels.

attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • PH2380_distortion.PNG
    PH2380_distortion.PNG
    236.9 KB · Views: 597
It might be better to take the speakers outside to setup the crossover / EQ.

The sweetspot measurement is showing a slope on the midbass driver that would make it quite peaky in the crossover region. Maybe a lack of baffle step compensation ?

Try getting them to measure flat outside at 1m, raised up off the ground on a table away from walls. Then put them back in the room and see if they still sound harsh.

Cheers,
Rob.
 

Attachments

  • midslope.jpg
    midslope.jpg
    346.8 KB · Views: 133
Last edited:
I reworked the crossover to get a smoother transition between drivers at 850 Hz bw48, I also took out some energy from around 3 kHz. The issues I'm having are now less pronounced, but it's still definitely noticeable whenever instruments effects or voices are concentrated in the 2 kHz to 5 kHz range at high levels. I'd say that 95% of the movie or music sounds great, but when this effect is triggered it kind of pulls you out of the experience. Could this be horn honk caused by the diffraction slot, and if so can it be solved by switching to an eminence H2EA waveguide?