sensitivity calculations

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I am designing the XO for an MTM centre, the woofers have a sensitivity of 88db whilst the tweeter is 91db the woofers are 8ohm and have an Re of 5.7ohm, the tweeter is 6ohm and has an Re of 4.6ohm.
Im using XOsim to work out the figures, because the 2 woofers in parralel will be 91db this matches the tweeter, but the impedance will be lower,
do i need to compensate for this?
 
The two woofers is paralell raise sensistivity by 6dB.

However you need to take baffle step correction into
account, this will reduce midrange sensistivity by 6dB.

So your tweeter needs to be padded by ~ 3dB.

Tried checking out XOsim, can't find it,
many crossover sim's are far too simplistic.

🙂 sreten.
 
michael said:
so how do i make a baffle step circuit?
are there any decent calculators online?
and also how to i pad the tweeter?

a) Is complicated by the intended positioning of the centre
speaker, but basically a first order L or L//R in series
with the drivers followed by the crossover components.

b) I can't find a freeware one as yet, I've been looking.

c) R in series and parallel with the tweeter.

🙂 sreten.
 
Its too simplistic.

The important thing is that the crossover is properly designed
to take into account the bass units inductance, the tweeters
fundamental resonance, any frequency response quirks of the
drivers, different sensitivities of the drivers, phase response at
crossover including the drivers phase response and offset, baffle
step compensation according the baffle width, acoustic summing
of the drivers at crossover, and off-axis dispersion issues.

You also have twin drivers - which needs to be accounted for.

Why I can't find a good freeware simulator.
They don't take acoustic issues into account.

🙂 sreten.
 
Hi,


Crossover Simulator can simultaneously handle up to 6 drivers, which means an MTM configuration should be a piece of cake. There is no limit to the size of your FRD and ZMA files (at least none that I know of) 🙂

XoverSim being incomplete (due to lack of time on my part), only the circuit simulation part is functional. In fact, that's all it is at the moment -- a general circuit simulator.

It helps a great deal if you have actual acoustical and electrical measurements of your drivers because things like propagation delays and baffle diffraction are already given (by the measurements). Otherwise ARPE, BDS, FRC and SPLTools can help post process manufacturer-supplied response graphs. These tools and more are available from the FRD Group.

For the wiring diagram you've shown, the "Series Filters" circuit input area should be the one to be used. Anything you can define in the "Parallel Filters" section you can also define in the Series Filters section in one go. I only included the 6 separate Parallel Filters input sections for convenience.


hth

Isaac
 
You may only use one instance of the six drivers per table. This is because the acoustical equivalent of multiple instances of the same driver is not yet possible to consider during the calculations. But you may enter multiple instances of the same driver if you want to see or extract the electrical effects.

Hi Isaac,

the above is from your notes.

So I concluded multiple drivers handling the same
frequency range are not acoustically modelled.

So an MTM cannot be acoustically modelled.

If it can your notes are very confusing.

🙂 sreten.
 
sreten,


Given only one set of measurements for a driver unit, but multiple instances of which, would not yield accurate acoustic results because the code at the moment does not allow the user to enter driver orientation on the enclosure.

This basically means that XoverSim relies on the user's measurements (or data post processing with other FRD tools) to include offsets, propagation delays etc... It really is only a circuit simulator at the moment.

Michael plans to use 2 of the same woofers per enclosure, so he would need to measure each one separately. Alternatively, he could process manufacturer's graphs to make virtual measurements.

XoverSim can handle both acoustical and electrical driver data; just make sure the supplied data is correct.


cheers 🙂

Isaac
 
I'm sorry Micheal but I can't really do that.

I hope you realise that I do not regard proper crossover design as a trivial task.

I'd need to be familiar with a commercial emulator such as Calsod or LEAP
to produce a reasonable design, and I don't have such an emulator.

Even so measurements and listening are still an important factor.

If you haven't bought the drive units I'd recommend building a good well documented and developed design.
I'll also point out my knowledge of centre speaker design regarding the effects of placement is very rudimentary.

🙂 sreten.
 
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