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#41
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On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 17:38:19 -0500, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: This brings up two factors not yet mentioned. The driver's fundamental resonance is affected by coupling to a considerable air mass in the line and by the line air's compliance, making the whole model messy. The usually stated solution to that is to *properly* damp the line. Yeah, it's often recommended to use higher stuffing density at the driver end (which I do with mine) and to taper the bore of the line (which I don't). They are surprisingly tolerant of my poor modeling ability, and good thing, too. For homebrewers, transmission lines have a great advantage. A perfectly good one can be made from a cardboard tube, like a concrete pouring form. No wood. Ditto for ported and unvented enclosures. Seen it done many times. The best woofers I've heard were made with (corian) tubes. They each had a fancy 18 inch driver in both ends, a small internal volume to force fundamental resonance above the operating range, and electronic correction to F-sub-c of 8 Hz and Q-sub-c of 0.5. Four of these tubes in a home situation was optimum, and the whole system only cost a little more than my house. Real nice sound though. Chris Hornbeck |
#42
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#43
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#44
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Chris Hornbeck wrote:
A perfectly good one can be made from a cardboard tube, like a concrete pouring form. Yeah, but Bose thought of it and patented it years ago so it's a big no-no! ![]() Look for their Bose Cannon product. -- Eric (Dero) Desrochers http://homepage.mac.com/dero72 Hiroshima 45, Tchernobyl 86, Windows 95 |
#45
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![]() William Sommerwerck wrote: Agreed. The question is, does a sealed-box overdamped woofer sound the same as a transmission line? I don't know the answer. What's overdamped mean technically? What's a transmission line speaker, again technically? Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#46
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On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 20:50:53 -0800, Bob Cain
wrote: What's overdamped mean technically? Total (transfer/ "acoustic") Q lower than Butterworth. What's a transmission line speaker, again technically? The name comes from RF, and is really abused in the transfer. "A damped, shorted-quarter-wavelength line" is both less and more than a useful model. Works anyway; excellent for homebrewers; hopeless for modeling-wannabe's like moi. Maybe you could shed some horsepressure? I can say that the interesting part may turn out to be in the fibrous tangle. Chaos enters here, so nobody wants to talk about it. Good fortune, Chris Hornbeck |
#47
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![]() Chris Hornbeck wrote: On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 20:50:53 -0800, Bob Cain wrote: What's overdamped mean technically? Total (transfer/ "acoustic") Q lower than Butterworth. What's a transmission line speaker, again technically? The name comes from RF, and is really abused in the transfer. "A damped, shorted-quarter-wavelength line" is both less and more than a useful model. Works anyway; excellent for homebrewers; hopeless for modeling-wannabe's like moi. Maybe you could shed some horsepressure? I can say that the interesting part may turn out to be in the fibrous tangle. Chaos enters here, so nobody wants to talk about it. Long haired wool was the fibre of choice IIRC. Graham |
#48
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On Wed, 01 Dec 2004 05:43:52 GMT, Chris Hornbeck
wrote: Maybe you could shed some horsepressure? Re-reading this reminds me that there are no W. Shakespeare's alive today. So, rather than trying, probably equally lamely, to paraphrase myself, please permit me to control-X the above, and insert: I wonder if you'd be interested in exerting a little rigor into the discussion? The existing models lack rigor, but more importantly lack a fresh viewpoint. Rock-n-roll, Chris Hornbeck |
#49
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On Wed, 01 Dec 2004 05:58:48 +0000, Pooh Bear
wrote: Long haired wool was the fibre of choice IIRC. Excellent! And man-made substitutes have a difficult task substituting. Real chaos is expensive. Your point emphasizes for me the lack of mathematical modeling in "transmission-line" speaker boxes. It's too difficult for schmoes like me, and too arbitrary for lotsa heavy-math folks. However, I can see an actual model as being possible, even if requiring an iterative solution. Similar models are needed for acoustic horn design, incidentally. Thanks, Chris Hornbeck |
#50
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![]() "Pooh Bear" What's a transmission line speaker, again technically? The name comes from RF, and is really abused in the transfer. "A damped, shorted-quarter-wavelength line" is both less and more than a useful model. Works anyway; excellent for homebrewers; hopeless for modeling-wannabe's like moi. Maybe you could shed some horsepressure? I can say that the interesting part may turn out to be in the fibrous tangle. Chaos enters here, so nobody wants to talk about it. Long haired wool was the fibre of choice IIRC. ** It all a load of Baaaaaaaah and humbug if you ask me. .............. Phil |
#51
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#52
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#53
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![]() Chris Hornbeck wrote: Now imagine the end of the line being reflective. At some time delay, the reflected impulse will arrive back at the source in phase opposition, and will attempt to cancel *the next* half-cycle wave. Yeah, we studied acoustic resonance in tubes in high school physics 45 years ago. Thought it looked sorta familiar. And rudimentary. I guess it is equivalent to a reactively terminated transmission line but what about that is supposed to make it sound good? You just get a nice comb of resonances. What am I missing here? Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#54
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![]() Chris Hornbeck wrote: On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 20:50:53 -0800, Bob Cain wrote: What's overdamped mean technically? Total (transfer/ "acoustic") Q lower than Butterworth. Cool. What's the benefit of that? The name comes from RF, and is really abused in the transfer. "A damped, shorted-quarter-wavelength line" is both less and more than a useful model. Works anyway; excellent for homebrewers; hopeless for modeling-wannabe's like moi. Maybe you could shed some horsepressure? Nah, just raw skepticism. I can say that the interesting part may turn out to be in the fibrous tangle. Chaos enters here, so nobody wants to talk about it. That's "fiber bundle". :-) Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#55
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![]() "Paul Stamler" wrote in message ... But typically a vented box is smaller still for an equivalent bass response, and easier to build, and lighter to carry. (Although less well-braced than a TL!) Just as well braced, if you want it to be though. TonyP. |
#56
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I guess it is equivalent to a reactively terminated
transmission line but what about that is supposed to make it sound good? You just get a nice comb of resonances. What am I missing here? That there aren't supposed to be any resonances -- the rear wave of the driver is (supposedly) absorbed, without reflection. |
#57
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Chris Hornbeck wrote:
On 01 Dec 2004 06:42:49 GMT, (Nousaine) wrote: Good smiley. But is the difference between a 'transmission line' defined by the exit of the line into the room? Otherwise an infinitely long line would simply be another another word for infinite baffle. The name comes from RF practice, but is terribly abused in the transfer. Imagine sending an impulse "down" a transmission line. Now imagine the end of the line being reflective. At some time delay, the reflected impulse will arrive back at the source in phase opposition, and will attempt to cancel *the next* half-cycle wave. And, of course, this is just great for a narrowband system (like a lot of antenna systems, for instance). The problem is that as you deal with a wider and wider frequency range, the model starts to come apart because the delay between cycles is of course different. How does this apply to the original impulse? Does this mean that "transients" can behave differently than "steady-states" ? And what about Betty Lou? I have heard some transmission line systems that actually had excellent transient response (well, as speakers go). I have seen some others that were just bloated and out of control too. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#58
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Bob Cain wrote:
Chris Hornbeck wrote: On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 20:50:53 -0800, Bob Cain wrote: What's overdamped mean technically? Total (transfer/ "acoustic") Q lower than Butterworth. Cool. What's the benefit of that? Presumably more accurate reproduction of transients. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#59
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In article ,
William Sommerwerck wrote: I guess it is equivalent to a reactively terminated transmission line but what about that is supposed to make it sound good? You just get a nice comb of resonances. What am I missing here? That there aren't supposed to be any resonances -- the rear wave of the driver is (supposedly) absorbed, without reflection. The idea being that the damping at the end provides a perfect termination to the line and therefore there is no reflection. I should say that a lot of "transmission line" speakers are not designed this way, and some of them are designed with open air venting at the end of the transmission line too. These aren't classical TL designs but they are now probably more common. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#60
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![]() William Sommerwerck wrote: I guess it is equivalent to a reactively terminated transmission line but what about that is supposed to make it sound good? You just get a nice comb of resonances. What am I missing here? That there aren't supposed to be any resonances -- the rear wave of the driver is (supposedly) absorbed, without reflection. How? Which is the rear wave, the tube end? Achieving termination in a tube at low frequencies is a really good trick. Only active termination has worked at all and then only within the tube itself because the terminating driver will radiate outside. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#61
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![]() William Sommerwerck wrote: I guess it is equivalent to a reactively terminated transmission line but what about that is supposed to make it sound good? You just get a nice comb of resonances. What am I missing here? That there aren't supposed to be any resonances -- the rear wave of the driver is (supposedly) absorbed, without reflection. How? Which is the rear wave, the tube end? Achieving termination in a tube at low frequencies is a really good trick. Only active termination has worked at all and then only within the tube itself because the terminating driver will radiate outside. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#62
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![]() Scott Dorsey wrote: Bob Cain wrote: Chris Hornbeck wrote: On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 20:50:53 -0800, Bob Cain wrote: What's overdamped mean technically? Total (transfer/ "acoustic") Q lower than Butterworth. Cool. What's the benefit of that? Presumably more accurate reproduction of transients. Hmmm. Way back when, I was taught that critically damped was the most accurate. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#63
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![]() Scott Dorsey wrote: Bob Cain wrote: Chris Hornbeck wrote: On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 20:50:53 -0800, Bob Cain wrote: What's overdamped mean technically? Total (transfer/ "acoustic") Q lower than Butterworth. Cool. What's the benefit of that? Presumably more accurate reproduction of transients. Hmmm. Way back when, I was taught that critically damped was the most accurate. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#64
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"Bob Cain" wrote in message
... Scott Dorsey wrote: Bob Cain wrote: Chris Hornbeck wrote: On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 20:50:53 -0800, Bob Cain wrote: What's overdamped mean technically? Total (transfer/ "acoustic") Q lower than Butterworth. Cool. What's the benefit of that? Presumably more accurate reproduction of transients. Hmmm. Way back when, I was taught that critically damped was the most accurate. I believe what's usually called "critically damped" has a Q of .577 or so, lower than the .707 of Butterworth, which is maximally flat. My experience has also been that a Q between .55 and .58 has the cleanest-sounding bass. Peace, Paul |
#65
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"Bob Cain" wrote in message
... Scott Dorsey wrote: Bob Cain wrote: Chris Hornbeck wrote: On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 20:50:53 -0800, Bob Cain wrote: What's overdamped mean technically? Total (transfer/ "acoustic") Q lower than Butterworth. Cool. What's the benefit of that? Presumably more accurate reproduction of transients. Hmmm. Way back when, I was taught that critically damped was the most accurate. I believe what's usually called "critically damped" has a Q of .577 or so, lower than the .707 of Butterworth, which is maximally flat. My experience has also been that a Q between .55 and .58 has the cleanest-sounding bass. Peace, Paul |
#66
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
I have heard some transmission line systems that actually had excellent transient response (well, as speakers go). My old TDL's sound pretty good. |
#67
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
I have heard some transmission line systems that actually had excellent transient response (well, as speakers go). My old TDL's sound pretty good. |
#68
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And speaking of building speakers, John, how did your effort go for
recreating the ServoDrives? -- Roger W. Norman SirMusic Studio "John Halliburton" wrote in message ... Actually, that is a good question. Why AREN'T the live sound guys using transmission line subs? It would seem like a good way to get much deeper bass, and with some proper vent design even some directionality, out of small bass cabinets. They do, it's just a special type, called a horn. ;) Best regards, John |
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