I'm a freshie to diy audio, and have been doing a lot of reading and learning before embarking on my first significant project. I'm interested in building speakers which will have one small power amp per driver, and active xo.
Ideally, I'd like to have just one line-level output going from my preamp to each speaker. I'd like to house the active xo and power amps inside the speaker. And I'd like to have the power supply for all this inside the speaker too. And no, I don't want to use toroidal xfmr for the power amps (availability and price are both problems here). So, the only inputs on the rear of my speakers, ideally, should be (i) an RCA or XLR socket for the signal, and (ii) an IEC socket for the mains supply.
Now my questions:
Any opinions and inputs most welcome. 🙂
Ideally, I'd like to have just one line-level output going from my preamp to each speaker. I'd like to house the active xo and power amps inside the speaker. And I'd like to have the power supply for all this inside the speaker too. And no, I don't want to use toroidal xfmr for the power amps (availability and price are both problems here). So, the only inputs on the rear of my speakers, ideally, should be (i) an RCA or XLR socket for the signal, and (ii) an IEC socket for the mains supply.
Now my questions:
- What do I need to do, if anything, to protect the signal-level circuits from interference caused by the speaker drivers whose coils will be less than 20" away? Assume unshielded drivers.
- What about interaction between the large power transformer and the speaker drivers? Typically, if I'm building a three-way, the large woofer coil will be perhaps 15-18" away from the power transformer.
Any opinions and inputs most welcome. 🙂
Hi tcpip!
Don't worry about the small signals which are close to the speaker.
The magentic field of the speaker is statical, so it does not induce to the signal, as long as the wires are not heavily moving....
From theory it could happen that a vibrating wire gets some signal induced, but I never heard about issues with that.
Shielding the XFR with metal is fine.
Generally you may probably not face to much issues
with induced hum from the XFR as you are able to provide
a lot of distance between the signals and the XFR.
You should also try to have much distance between the
signal sockets and the mains socket.
So you may probably "only" face more or less the usual hum issues due to unfortunate grounding structure.
For this you should try to check through the relevant threads
of the forum, if you are not experienced.
Good Luck
Markus
Don't worry about the small signals which are close to the speaker.
The magentic field of the speaker is statical, so it does not induce to the signal, as long as the wires are not heavily moving....
From theory it could happen that a vibrating wire gets some signal induced, but I never heard about issues with that.
Shielding the XFR with metal is fine.
Generally you may probably not face to much issues
with induced hum from the XFR as you are able to provide
a lot of distance between the signals and the XFR.
You should also try to have much distance between the
signal sockets and the mains socket.
So you may probably "only" face more or less the usual hum issues due to unfortunate grounding structure.
For this you should try to check through the relevant threads
of the forum, if you are not experienced.
Good Luck
Markus
Thanks a lot.ChocoHolic said:Don't worry about the small signals which are close to the speaker.
The magentic field of the speaker is statical, so it does not induce to the signal, as long as the wires are not heavily moving....
I was actually wondering whether the high-current output of the power amps flowing through the voice coils of the speaker drivers would create a varying magnetic field which could then induce electrical currents in the signal-carrying leads of the active xo and other small-signal paths. I know the static magnetic field is not a concern.
But from what I hear, even this voice-coil magnetism should not be strong enough to worry my circuits, which will be more than a foot away from the coils.
Yes, I intend to put the RCA sockets at the top of the speaker's rear wall, and the mains input and xfmr at the very bottom. That should give me enough distance.Shielding the XFR with metal is fine.
Generally you may probably not face to much issues
with induced hum from the XFR as you are able to provide
a lot of distance between the signals and the XFR.
Yes, all those star grounding problems will have to be taken care of in the usual way. That's something separate which I'm trying to address anyway.So you may probably "only" face more or less the usual hum issues due to unfortunate grounding structure.
Thanks a lot.
- Status
- Not open for further replies.