Sound comparison between the “Simple Reflex” for Alpair 10.3/10p and the “Classic Golden Ratio Mar-Ken” for Alpair 10.3/10p

“Simple Reflex” historically is about a max flat alignment once all of the signal chain is taken into consideration; FWIW, my first 'read' on the subject: Critical Damping: The Missing Link in Speaker Operation

Over time, several folks took all the pioneer's knowledge and derived a ~ equivalent version for just a single driver alignment, extending it above and below Fs based on its acceleration bandwidth (BW), ending at the driver's upper (Fhm) and lower (Flm) mass corners and after all the 'dust had settled', Messrs Thiele, Small won out, hence T/S specs.

upper: Fhm = 2*Fs/Qts'

lower: Flc = Fs*Qts'/2 (AFAIK only useful for reactance annulled BLHs)

Qts': 2*Fs/Fhm

By 1981 it had boiled down to this:

In 1981 the Margolis/Small design routine became increasingly popular due to it being written for an early HP handheld calculator where ~0.403 Qts' combined with the box volume [Vb] = driver compliance [Vas] and box tuning [Fb] = driver resonance [Fs], i.e. T/S max flat BR alignment, so the pioneer's ideal alignment became the cornerstone of where traditional bass reflex [BR] ends and contemporary [under-damped] speaker box design begins.

Margolis-Small's HP 67/97 & 41C calculator program if wanting all the math for vented, sealed: http://www.aes.org/e-lib/browse.cfm?elib=3902

Vented net volume (Vb) (L) = 20*Vas*Qts'^3.3 (Ft^3 = (Vb)/~28.31685)

Vented box tuning (Fb) (Hz) = 0.42*Fs*Qts'^-0.96

F3 (Hz) = Fs*0.28*Qts^-1.4

(Qts'): (Qts) + any added series resistance (Rs): http://www.mh-audio.nl/Calculators/newqts.html
 
Sort of. Despite the desperate marketing attempts in some quarters to elevate it to some separate profundity, impulse response is directly linked to FR (and CSD for that matter -you can generate both from an impulse response). The regular vented box I did has a flatter anechoic FR, that's all; it needs the extra Vb to provide that, & will be better sited away from room boundaries as a result. Just different alignments for different requirements, that's all.
Hello Scott,

many thanks to this interesting information.

Regards and a nice Weekend

Stefan
 
Define 'better' since for some it's about how much gain BW while others are more interested in transient response, etc., so best of both is make it T/S max flat and damp to 'taste', with heavier damping to mimic the Onken's high resistance, ~aperiodic vents.
 

Attachments

  • Dave p10's Click Test diagram.png
    Dave p10's Click Test diagram.png
    8.9 KB · Views: 88
  • Like
Reactions: Vix
The basic reflex will likely give more bass, and a bit lower, the Mar-Kens have a more refined, elegant bass. The full-on trapezoid does give a lower diffraction signiture which makes for a greater sense of the box disappearing.

Quantity vrs quality.

Both are good.

dave
 
  • Like
Reactions: GM
Yeah, being lazy, always short of time I just cut kerfs on the baffle back side at driver frame or horn width and bent it backwards at a 1:12 slope and called it 'good enough' for 'slap echo', good enough for a speaker, though never measured one nor had/have any software to sim it AFAIK, though one pro cinema/HT designer said I needed to double it vs my assumed summed baffle slope met the 2:12 required.