haemphyst wrote:
the "transient response" of the woofer. (I still hate using that phrase - it, IMO, relates to something completely different) |
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Don't tell me you were down town again with a stop watch and a dollar bill on a string, timing the response of the homeless people to your money. 
Sorry for the tasteless joke.
haemphyst wrote:
Steven I was assuming EQUIVALENT ALIGNMENTS. All drivers in a sealed, and say Qtc of .707 enclosure. The enclosure size and alignment DOES ABSOLUTELY affect the output, but my statement should have put all of the drivers on a level playing field, even if it does not say it. |
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I think you missed my point. But it could have been because I didn't explain it well enough. I was merely saying that they were designed around Hoffmans Iron Law, just like ours was. They chose efficiency at the cost of enclosure size. We chose enclosure size at the cost of efficiency. The excursion of the subs has nothing to do with it as it isn't a physical parameter of the driver. You can design a high excursion sub that is very efficient. However it will require a large enclosure, or be a large midbass driver.
haemphyst wrote:
No. Inefficiency is NOT a symptom of excursion, but it is completely a by-product of excursion. The trade-offs are manifest! |
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Again, I don't think so. It all depends on the engineering of the driver. If you want high excursion with high efficiency, it can be done without a problem. The reason you don't see it is because there is no market for them.
haemphyst wrote:
Another thing I just thought of: Longer excursion almost necessarily maens more stress on a diaphragm, this mandates heavier, stiffer cones to minimize distortions... (exotic materials not completely included, but not completely excluded either - this IS a GROSS generalization) I was looking at an Eminence guitar woofer, and it has an Sd of 95 inches square, a Vd of a MERE 125cc, a MMS of 33g, but an efficiency of 96dB! (this is a guestimate, as the efficiency guide for these drivers actually specifies X efficiency at Y frequency - the sign of a GOOD loudspeaker manufacturer. These actually spec as high as 101.8dB at 3K! (Alpha-12)) Check here for the way Eminence specs their drivers. |
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Keep in mind that the guitar speaker you mention had to have a response up pretty high, probably covering most of the midrange territory. This means it couldn't have a heavy cone. However it probably didn't have much of a response below 40 Hz. It had to give up low end extention for high end extention and efficiency. But then you are talking about two completely different markets with two completely different requirements from their speakers.
haemphyst wrote:
Poormanq45 Yes the CV and JBL drivers DO have a larger Sd, but not enough to equal the kind of efficiency gains one sees between them and an Eclipse or Adire. My SW9122, for example, spec'd on the Klippel Machine at the Harman Labs, acheived an ABYSMAL 84dB! The old-school (1st gen) 10 inch Ti?, 78dB!!! |
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Out of curiousity, are you allowed to share the reports for those drivers? I would love to see how they fare. If you don't want to share it publically, you can send it to skephart@adireaudio.com.
Steven Kephart
Adire Audio