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#1
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bose 901
Scott Dorsey wrote:
Yes that's 3 db down at 30 Hz from 1khz. My old boxes resonated at 100 Hz. That was the peak. Sure, if you do a swept sine test without a filter. Put 30 Hz into the box and you get output, but none of that output is actually at 30 Hz. Not true. If you put 30 Hz into a closed box speaker, sure you'll get some 30 Hz out. I used to put 16 Hz in and rattle the window, but almost nothing heard except the spiders. You will also find a delay of the 30 Hz since it's below resonance, the spider will slow it down and cause a phase shift. Thats all I'm going to rehash about the 901, plenty of old stuff in the archives. Greg |
#2
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bose 901
"gregz" wrote in message ... Scott Dorsey wrote: Yes that's 3 db down at 30 Hz from 1khz. My old boxes resonated at 100 Hz. That was the peak. Sure, if you do a swept sine test without a filter. Put 30 Hz into the box and you get output, but none of that output is actually at 30 Hz. Not true. If you put 30 Hz into a closed box speaker, sure you'll get some 30 Hz out. I used to put 16 Hz in and rattle the window, Some "closed box speakers" perhaps, but not one with 4" drivers. Trevor. |
#3
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bose 901
On Sun, 29 Jul 2012 14:28:07 +1000, "Trevor" wrote:
"gregz" wrote in message ... Scott Dorsey wrote: Yes that's 3 db down at 30 Hz from 1khz. My old boxes resonated at 100 Hz. That was the peak. Sure, if you do a swept sine test without a filter. Put 30 Hz into the box and you get output, but none of that output is actually at 30 Hz. Not true. If you put 30 Hz into a closed box speaker, sure you'll get some 30 Hz out. I used to put 16 Hz in and rattle the window, Some "closed box speakers" perhaps, but not one with 4" drivers. Trevor. I still have a nice pair of circa 1972 Scott acoustic suspension speakers. The 8 Inch driver 3 way model. Finding a sealed driver (cone, button, and surround)is not easy. But they are still fine and still make great surround speakers. |
#4
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bose 901
MrTallyman wrote:
On Sun, 29 Jul 2012 14:28:07 +1000, "Trevor" wrote: "gregz" wrote in message ... Scott Dorsey wrote: Yes that's 3 db down at 30 Hz from 1khz. My old boxes resonated at 100 Hz. That was the peak. Sure, if you do a swept sine test without a filter. Put 30 Hz into the box and you get output, but none of that output is actually at 30 Hz. Not true. If you put 30 Hz into a closed box speaker, sure you'll get some 30 Hz out. I used to put 16 Hz in and rattle the window, Some "closed box speakers" perhaps, but not one with 4" drivers. Trevor. I still have a nice pair of circa 1972 Scott acoustic suspension speakers. The 8 Inch driver 3 way model. Finding a sealed driver (cone, button, and surround)is not easy. But they are still fine and still make great surround speakers. I don't completely understand that. My first set of pre built speakers I bought in1969 from allied radio, Utah components, acoustic suspension. Then I had AR4x's. I still have small set of advents in the garage, and I recall rebuilding a set of AR2ax's in the 80's. In the army in 1970' I really wanted a set of AR3's but out of range for me. I settled for upside down trash can's in the barracks, with radio shack coaxial's Greg |
#5
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bose 901
"MrTallyman" wrote in message ... On Sun, 29 Jul 2012 14:28:07 +1000, "Trevor" wrote: "gregz" wrote in message ... I used to put 16 Hz in and rattle the window, Some "closed box speakers" perhaps, but not one with 4" drivers. I still have a nice pair of circa 1972 Scott acoustic suspension speakers. The 8 Inch driver 3 way model. Finding a sealed driver (cone, button, and surround)is not easy. But they are still fine and still make great surround speakers. What has that got to do with the Bose 901's though? Trevor. |
#6
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bose 901
MrTallyman wrote:
I still have a nice pair of circa 1972 Scott acoustic suspension speakers. The 8 Inch driver 3 way model. Finding a sealed driver (cone, button, and surround)is not easy. But they are still fine and still make great surround speakers. I remember Scott's ad compaign at the time: the basic theme was "Where do Scott speakers sound best." I also remember Jim Wilkinson taping the ad to the bottom of the lid of the toilet in the bathroom at the hi fi store where he worked. -- +--------------------------------+ + Dick Pierce | + Professional Audio Development | +--------------------------------+ |
#7
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bose 901
Dick Pierce wrote:
MrTallyman wrote: I still have a nice pair of circa 1972 Scott acoustic suspension speakers. The 8 Inch driver 3 way model. Finding a sealed driver (cone, button, and surround)is not easy. But they are still fine and still make great surround speakers. I remember Scott's ad compaign at the time: the basic theme was "Where do Scott speakers sound best." I also remember Jim Wilkinson taping the ad to the bottom of the lid of the toilet in the bathroom at the hi fi store where he worked. I know nothing about Scott speakers, but I read about them from literature in the 60's. What I do know, they had a small anechoic chamber. I was staying in a motel in Maynard. One night I walked next door to Scott through over a foot of snow. I looked in the window. I relived the visions of the advertising flyer. Anechoic chamber right near the front window ! Just reliving a fond old memory of mine. Greg |
#8
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bose 901
gregz wrote:
You will also find a delay of the 30 Hz since it's below resonance, the spider will slow it down and cause a phase shift. Uh, no. The spider does not "slow it down and cause a phase shift." Whatever phase shift exists is not because the "spider slows it down." Thats all I'm going to rehash about the 901, That's good to know. plenty of old stuff in the archives. And just like the Internet in general, some of it right, some of it wrong, and much of it irrelevant. -- +--------------------------------+ + Dick Pierce | + Professional Audio Development | +--------------------------------+ |
#9
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Bose 901
Dick Pierce wrote:
gregz wrote: You will also find a delay of the 30 Hz since it's below resonance, the spider will slow it down and cause a phase shift. Uh, no. The spider does not "slow it down and cause a phase shift." Whatever phase shift exists is not because the "spider slows it down." I guessed. When I was trying to figure out transmission line speakers, I experimented with a 6.5 inch driver and a pipe. I was trying to figure out delays along the pipe with stuffing. I first used the generator as sync and measured various lengths along pipe. What was predicted was lower frequencies having longer delays through stuffing. Until I placed a second mic right behind the driver did I discover the delay was caused by the driver. This was below resonate frequency of driver. I never found the predicted longer delay at lower frequencies according to at least one paper. Greg Thats all I'm going to rehash about the 901, That's good to know. plenty of old stuff in the archives. And just like the Internet in general, some of it right, some of it wrong, and much of it irrelevant. |
#10
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Transmission line nonsense, was Bose 901
gregz wrote:
Dick Pierce wrote: gregz wrote: You will also find a delay of the 30 Hz since it's below resonance, the spider will slow it down and cause a phase shift. Uh, no. The spider does not "slow it down and cause a phase shift." Whatever phase shift exists is not because the "spider slows it down." I guessed. When I was trying to figure out transmission line speakers, I experimented with a 6.5 inch driver and a pipe. I was trying to figure out delays along the pipe with stuffing. I first used the generator as sync and measured various lengths along pipe. What was predicted was lower frequencies having longer delays through stuffing. Until I placed a second mic right behind the driver did I discover the delay was caused by the driver. This was below resonate frequency of driver. I never found the predicted longer delay at lower frequencies according to at least one paper. And assuming your technique was oging to give you a reliable measure of actual propogation delay is what's wrong with so- called "transmission line theory". People have used these measurements and derived completely absurd conclusions about the effective speed of sound through such a line. I've seen claims that the "speed of sound" in a transmission line drops by 75%. Sorry, but that's just plain nuts. The MOST the stuffing can do is drop the tranmission speed by about .7 times, and that's assuming a PERFECT absorber, capable of complete conversion from adiabatic to isothermal conditions. And that just doesn't happen. You'll be lucky to see a 15% actual reduction in propogation velocity. And to talks about something that's shorter than a wavelength as a transmission line itself is bordering on absurd. Consider the fact that at those frequencies, you're actually looking at the system as a Helmholtz resonator with a whopping large acoustic inertance, a tinu effective acoustic cimpliance, and a pretty high absorbtion loss, and then calculate what happens to the effective pahse shift as you move through that overdamped resonance. Bud Fried (of, among other things, IMF fame) did more to set back the amateur's grasp of physical acoustics then damned near anyone else: he, regretfuylly, was a very persuasive, charming personality who was otherwise clueless about acoustics. -- +--------------------------------+ + Dick Pierce | + Professional Audio Development | +--------------------------------+ |
#11
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Transmission line nonsense, was Bose 901
Dick Pierce wrote:
gregz wrote: Dick Pierce wrote: gregz wrote: You will also find a delay of the 30 Hz since it's below resonance, the spider will slow it down and cause a phase shift. Uh, no. The spider does not "slow it down and cause a phase shift." Whatever phase shift exists is not because the "spider slows it down." I guessed. When I was trying to figure out transmission line speakers, I experimented with a 6.5 inch driver and a pipe. I was trying to figure out delays along the pipe with stuffing. I first used the generator as sync and measured various lengths along pipe. What was predicted was lower frequencies having longer delays through stuffing. Until I placed a second mic right behind the driver did I discover the delay was caused by the driver. This was below resonate frequency of driver. I never found the predicted longer delay at lower frequencies according to at least one paper. And assuming your technique was oging to give you a reliable measure of actual propogation delay is what's wrong with so- called "transmission line theory". People have used these measurements and derived completely absurd conclusions about the effective speed of sound through such a line. I've seen claims that the "speed of sound" in a transmission line drops by 75%. Sorry, but that's just plain nuts. The MOST the stuffing can do is drop the tranmission speed by about .7 times, and that's assuming a PERFECT absorber, capable of complete conversion from adiabatic to isothermal conditions. And that just doesn't happen. You'll be lucky to see a 15% actual reduction in propogation velocity. And to talks about something that's shorter than a wavelength as a transmission line itself is bordering on absurd. Consider the fact that at those frequencies, you're actually looking at the system as a Helmholtz resonator with a whopping large acoustic inertance, a tinu effective acoustic cimpliance, and a pretty high absorbtion loss, and then calculate what happens to the effective pahse shift as you move through that overdamped resonance. Bud Fried (of, among other things, IMF fame) did more to set back the amateur's grasp of physical acoustics then damned near anyone else: he, regretfuylly, was a very persuasive, charming personality who was otherwise clueless about acoustics. I used a very short line and your probably right. Typical delay I measured about 7 % . However, at 2.6 lbs per cubic foot, I got up to 35% , and was hard to measure because it was a highly attenuated signal. at suggested stuffing rates, 8 oz per cu ft., more like less than 3% delay. I don't think its a transmission line if there is no signal at the end of the pipe. Greg |
#12
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Transmission line nonsense, was Bose 901
gregz wrote:
I used a very short line and your probably right. Typical delay I measured about 7 % . However, at 2.6 lbs per cubic foot, I got up to 35% , and was hard to measure because it was a highly attenuated signal. at suggested stuffing rates, 8 oz per cu ft., more like less than 3% delay. I don't think its a transmission line if there is no signal at the end of the pipe. How are you measuring delay? By using the phase shift? -- +--------------------------------+ + Dick Pierce | + Professional Audio Development | +--------------------------------+ |
#13
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Transmission line nonsense, was Bose 901
"Dick Pierce" wrote in message ... Bud Fried (of, among other things, IMF fame) did more to set back the amateur's grasp of physical acoustics then damned near anyone else: he, regretfuylly, was a very persuasive, charming personality who was otherwise clueless about acoustics. Great to see you back Dick, and help to counteract such BS that some claim as "science". Trevor. |
#14
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That is really useful information!
!!! Quote:
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#15
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Transmission line nonsense, was Bose 901
Dick Pierce wrote:
And to talks about something that's shorter than a wavelength as a transmission line itself is bordering on absurd. Consider the fact that at those frequencies, you're actually looking at the system as a Helmholtz resonator with a whopping large acoustic inertance, a tinu effective acoustic cimpliance, and a pretty high absorbtion loss, and then calculate what happens to the effective pahse shift as you move through that overdamped resonance. So what you say is that a "transmission line speaker" is a bass reflex box with a very small box volume and a very large port volume? Kind regards Peter Larsen Bud Fried (of, among other things, IMF fame) did more to set back the amateur's grasp of physical acoustics then damned near anyone else: he, regretfuylly, was a very persuasive, charming personality who was otherwise clueless about acoustics. |
#16
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Transmission line nonsense, was Bose 901
"Peter Larsen" wrote in message . .. Dick Pierce wrote: And to talks about something that's shorter than a wavelength as a transmission line itself is bordering on absurd. Consider the fact that at those frequencies, you're actually looking at the system as a Helmholtz resonator with a whopping large acoustic inertance, a tinu effective acoustic cimpliance, and a pretty high absorbtion loss, and then calculate what happens to the effective pahse shift as you move through that overdamped resonance. So what you say is that a "transmission line speaker" is a bass reflex box with a very small box volume and a very large port volume? And a highly damped port. A transmission line speaker can be considered to be a very wastefully designed bass reflex. |
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