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cocopeep
07-16-2007, 01:55 PM
I remember in the 70's and 80's that the larger the woofer, the more bass you would expect to come out of a speaker cabinet, so one would expect a speaker with a 12 or 15 inch woofer to produce more bass than a speaker with a 6 or 8 inch woofer. The result however, would be a gigantic cabinet that was almost the size of a small refrigerator and sometimes have one or more large drivers. Is it possible that a speaker with an 6 inch woofer can outperform a 10 inch woofer given the right cabinet, quality of driver and power input? I would also think that a smaller woofer compared to a 15 inch would produce a tighter, cleaner bass, no?

bfalls
07-16-2007, 05:38 PM
With subwoofers there's always a tradeoff. To get good bass, general thinking is you need a large driver in a large cabinet to reproduce the waveform necessary for full 20HZ-80HZ reproduction. You can tradeoff a larger driver for a smaller one, but it requires more excursion, which means more power. But you have to be careful not to drive the smaller woofer to distortion.

If the driver can reproduce the output without distortion and works well within its limits there's no problem, but what usually happens is the smaller driver falls short of the task and starts to distort under higher power requirements. Tighter, cleaner, lower, bass is impossible for a smaller driver, the physics just isn't there. I own a Klipsch SW8 subwoofer, but I use it only to reporduce upper bass, which it does very well. I use my Legacy Focus mains with 3 12" subwofers and setup in a biamp configuration to reproduce deep bass for my system. Good luck with your search.

basite
07-17-2007, 03:24 AM
given the right cabinet, a 10" driver could give the same amount of bass as a 12" in the same cabinet. but it would produce different bass. and no, bigger drivers will have the tighter, cleaner bass...

kexodusc
07-17-2007, 04:08 AM
I remember in the 70's and 80's that the larger the woofer, the more bass you would expect to come out of a speaker cabinet, so one would expect a speaker with a 12 or 15 inch woofer to produce more bass than a speaker with a 6 or 8 inch woofer. The result however, would be a gigantic cabinet that was almost the size of a small refrigerator and sometimes have one or more large drivers. Is it possible that a speaker with an 6 inch woofer can outperform a 10 inch woofer given the right cabinet, quality of driver and power input?

It's possible - but as mentioned there's tradeoff. First, and most obvious, is cost. If you expect a 6" woofer to produce bass on par with a 10" woofer, it's not going to come cheap. There's a few things that are needed. As mentioned, longer excursion larger woofers typically have bigger, stronger motors that offer longer excursion, so it'll move in and out further. That 6" driver has 1/2 the area basically of a 10" woofer, and per mm of excursion the volume of air it sweeps is going to be dramatically lower as a result. So you've really got to beef up the excursion.

There's a downside to long-throw woofers though. As you increase the excursion you increase the requirement for a sufficiently strong motor. The further the woofer moves out, the greater the chance of distortion. Not to mention, the transient response of the longer excursion is usually poorer than the smaller one. Personally, I've observed transient response to be a much more important factor in how good a woofer sounds for low bass than distortion. Our ears become less sensitive to frequencies and distortion below 50 Hz, but if you start stretching out and missing notes, your going to hear it.

I have a sub I built with a 15" woofer with decent excursion for the size, but nothing as extravagant as some 15" woofers have. I built mom and dad a 12" sub whose woofer had 80% longer excursion. It'll play about as loud, but requires 3 times the power to play just as loud, and doesn't sound as good at higher volumes. But the box is less than half the size, so again, we're back to a question of tradeoffs.



I would also think that a smaller woofer compared to a 15 inch would produce a tighter, cleaner bass, no?
A few decades ago that was probably true, but that was because of different driver technology. Today's it's just the opposite.
In my example above, my 15" woofer has far better sound quality because it doesn't have to work nearly as hard to play low and loud as the smaller woofer, and it moves more air with each sweep. Because it doesn't work as hard, the motor never loses "control" of the woofer, there's less distortion, better transient response.
My 15" woofer is considerably cheaper than the 12", and requires 1/3 the power. I built it a better sub for about 1/2 the price. The tradeoff is I have a 20" cube in my room compared to mom's much smaller subwoofer.

I have to laugh a bit at some of the subwoofers I see on the market today. It almost seems like subwoofer's are sold by watts and inches alone when I walk into some stores. You see lots of 10" and 12" woofers with very low resonance frequencies that reduce the efficiency of the driver, so they mate it with a high watt amplifier. I saw one kid turn down a rather modest 12" sub because the 10" sub had 1200 peak watts or something foolish. compared to the 600 watts the 12" unit had. He didn't even listen to them. The 12" sub was a much better unit.

markw
07-17-2007, 05:08 AM
You have a choice of three design goals.
1) Small Size
2) Efficiency
3) Deep Bass.
You can have only two:.

a) A large enclosure with an efficient speaker that produces a lot of deep bass
b) A small enclosure that needs a lot of power driving the speaker and produces a lot of deep bass.

You cannot have a small enclosure that's efficient and produces a kot of deep bass.

It's all in moving of air. A small speaker needs a greater excursion than a larger speaker to move the same amount of air. And, the smaller the speaker gets, the more power it's lkely to need to move that air.

E-Stat
07-17-2007, 08:55 AM
You can have only two:.
I like your evaluation. :)

Back in the 70s, I worked for a hi-fi shop that sold ADS speakers along with Magneplanar, Acoustat, and Dayton-Wright. The ADS approach was to double up using smaller (7" or 8") woofers to perform as a larger driver.


It's all in moving of air.
Which is why our planars must have huge surface area.

rw

markw
07-17-2007, 09:03 AM
The ADS approach was to double up using smaller (7" or 8") woofers to perform as a larger driver.I loved the 710 and 810. they had the best sound of any speaker in that size/price range I could find then.

Would that I could afford them at the time.

JohnMichael
07-17-2007, 12:23 PM
I loved the 710 and 810. they had the best sound of any speaker in that size/price range I could find then.

Would that I could afford them at the time.



I liked them but I could only afford the ADS L570 speakers. Single 8 inch woofer and dome tweeter. Beautiful cabinets with the perforated metal grill. They are still being enjoyed by the gentleman who bought them.

markw
07-17-2007, 01:14 PM
Around that time I was transtioning from a pair of Wharfedale 40 C's to a pair of JBL Lancer 55's, or "the thunderlizards" as they came to be known.

The ported Wharfedales couldn't handle the power.

.

O'Shag
07-17-2007, 05:45 PM
given the right cabinet, a 10" driver could give the same amount of bass as a 12" in the same cabinet. but it would produce different bass. and no, bigger drivers will have the tighter, cleaner bass...

This is not necessarily true and really depends on the application. A smaller driver has the advantage of speed and clarity within its optimal operating range. The advantage of the larger bass driver is DB output capability, potentially higher Q factor, and extension. the larger woofer will extend lower than, say, 25hz without strain and distortion than the smaller woofer. that is why larger woofers are used for subwoofer applications (but that doesn;t mean a smaller woofer won't shake the house). Most smaller woofers will be severely challenged to hit 18hz without noticable distortion. On the other hand, a smaller well-designed woofer such as the ceramic coated 6" woofers in well executed ported design such as my Monitor Audio GR60s are incredibly fast and coherent, while putting out more bass than most people will need in the average sized room.. It really depends on what range one expects the woofer to cover. Many large state-of-the-art speakers have large enough cabinets to accomodate two large 15" woofers per cabinet, but will instead opt to use a smaller woofer for midbass for its speed and coherence in its optimal range of operation. Very few large woofers have sufficent speed to keep up with very fast speakers such as the Martin Logans for example. One must keep in mind that midbass and deep bass performance are also a function of the preamp and amp..:2:

cocopeep
07-17-2007, 05:48 PM
It's possible - but as mentioned there's tradeoff. First, and most obvious, is cost. If you expect a 6" woofer to produce bass on par with a 10" woofer, it's not going to come cheap. There's a few things that are needed. As mentioned, longer excursion larger woofers typically have bigger, stronger motors that offer longer excursion, so it'll move in and out further. That 6" driver has 1/2 the area basically of a 10" woofer, and per mm of excursion the volume of air it sweeps is going to be dramatically lower as a result. So you've really got to beef up the excursion.

There's a downside to long-throw woofers though. As you increase the excursion you increase the requirement for a sufficiently strong motor. The further the woofer moves out, the greater the chance of distortion. Not to mention, the transient response of the longer excursion is usually poorer than the smaller one. Personally, I've observed transient response to be a much more important factor in how good a woofer sounds for low bass than distortion. Our ears become less sensitive to frequencies and distortion below 50 Hz, but if you start stretching out and missing notes, your going to hear it.

I have a sub I built with a 15" woofer with decent excursion for the size, but nothing as extravagant as some 15" woofers have. I built mom and dad a 12" sub whose woofer had 80% longer excursion. It'll play about as loud, but requires 3 times the power to play just as loud, and doesn't sound as good at higher volumes. But the box is less than half the size, so again, we're back to a question of tradeoffs.


A few decades ago that was probably true, but that was because of different driver technology. Today's it's just the opposite.
In my example above, my 15" woofer has far better sound quality because it doesn't have to work nearly as hard to play low and loud as the smaller woofer, and it moves more air with each sweep. Because it doesn't work as hard, the motor never loses "control" of the woofer, there's less distortion, better transient response.
My 15" woofer is considerably cheaper than the 12", and requires 1/3 the power. I built it a better sub for about 1/2 the price. The tradeoff is I have a 20" cube in my room compared to mom's much smaller subwoofer.

I have to laugh a bit at some of the subwoofers I see on the market today. It almost seems like subwoofer's are sold by watts and inches alone when I walk into some stores. You see lots of 10" and 12" woofers with very low resonance frequencies that reduce the efficiency of the driver, so they mate it with a high watt amplifier. I saw one kid turn down a rather modest 12" sub because the 10" sub had 1200 peak watts or something foolish. compared to the 600 watts the 12" unit had. He didn't even listen to them. The 12" sub was a much better unit.
Thank you for your reply, very in-depth! I learn something every day. Something else however, what if in a tower speaker, you see alot of 6 1/2, 7 1/2 woofers, mabye 2 in one speaker cabinet. In a good speaker cabinet design, I'm wondering if 2 - 6 1/2 woofers are able to equal the bass output & quality of a 10" or larger driver?

markw
07-17-2007, 06:04 PM
Thank you for your reply, very in-depth! I learn something every day. Something else however, what if in a tower speaker, you see alot of 6 1/2, 7 1/2 woofers, mabye 2 in one speaker cabinet. In a good speaker cabinet design, I'm wondering if 2 - 6 1/2 woofers are able to equal the bass output & quality of a 10" or larger driver?If I recall my basic math from high school (graduated in '67), the formula for area of a circle* is (radius X pi (3.14)) squared.

So. for a 10 " speaker we would have (5 X 3.14) squared, or (15.7 X 15.7), or 246 sq inches.

A 6.5" driver would be (3.25 X 3.14) squared, or (10.20 X 10.20), or 104.1 sq. inches.
Double that for two drivers, and you have 208 sq inches of driver space.

* Yeah, yeah. Technically it's a cone but I'm not gettin' into that math. Simply measure the actual distance along the cone from the edge to the center and use those numbers. this may not be exact but it's close enough fr government work.

Remember, this does not take into account the excursion, efficiency, enclosure design, and many other factors that I'll let others worry about, although you may want to get a book or two on this if you're really interested.

canuckle
07-17-2007, 07:48 PM
If I recall my basic math from high school (graduated in '67), the formula for area of a circle* is (radius X pi (3.14)) squared.

So. for a 10 " speaker we would have (5 X 3.14) squared, or (15.7 X 15.7), or 246 sq inches.

A 6.5" driver would be (3.25 X 3.14) squared, or (10.20 X 10.20), or 104.1 sq. inches.
Double that for two drivers, and you have 208 sq inches of driver space.
Hopefully your math teacher gave you an F! ;)

The formula for surface area of a circle is pi*(r*r) "pi-r-squared"

For a 10" speaker, the surface area is (5*5)pi = 78.5 square inches

For a 6.5" speaker, the surface area is (3.25*3.25)pi = 33 square inches.

You can't directly correlate surface area with bass extension though, as the size of the body producing the wave is relevant. 25 2" drivers will never produce an 18Hz wave even though the surface area would be the same as a 10" driver. 2" drivers just aren't capable of that kind of extension... excursion can only compensate so much before it causes unacceptable distortion.

superdougiefreshness
07-18-2007, 01:22 AM
This is very interesting indeed. I auditioned PMC loudspeakers about two years ago and found that for such a small driver they had mid bass that was quite extended. Now due to their drivers being loaded within what PMC called "time line-porting" their cabinets those little drivers looked like tweeters not mid units at all, and the mid bass was big and fantastic. Could some speaker mfg make a loaded designed port for a 6" driver configuration with lets say 4 or 5 of the 6" drivers or even smaller in a time line ported design and bring a sub bass sound to the soundstage......??? Now I know this requires power but my question asks if it is possible in design theory and within smaller cabinets......?

PMC, Renaud-"spell on that one please", PSB, Axiom are just a few with some of this going on. Maybe I'm just talking out my ARSS...LOL......anyway ready, set, GO

Later Dudes
:dita:
P.S. Does anyone know what speaker I have in my little corner, I do so lets see who else can figure that one out in here. And by the way do you know how long it took me to find that picture even with the net at my disposal.....? almost a year.........

Feanor
07-18-2007, 02:14 AM
I loved the 710 and 810. they had the best sound of any speaker in that size/price range I could find then.

Would that I could afford them at the time.

I owned a pair of late-model 710's under the Braun label -- very nice speakers for sure.

Feanor
07-18-2007, 02:17 AM
Thank you for your reply, very in-depth! I learn something every day. Something else however, what if in a tower speaker, you see alot of 6 1/2, 7 1/2 woofers, mabye 2 in one speaker cabinet. In a good speaker cabinet design, I'm wondering if 2 - 6 1/2 woofers are able to equal the bass output & quality of a 10" or larger driver?

Put two bass drivers in a cabinet and you require twice the cabinet volume of a single unit.

markw
07-18-2007, 02:21 AM
Hopefully your math teacher gave you an F! ;)

The formula for surface area of a circle is pi*(r*r) "pi-r-squared"

For a 10" speaker, the surface area is (5*5)pi = 78.5 square inches

For a 6.5" speaker, the surface area is (3.25*3.25)pi = 33 square inches.

You can't directly correlate surface area with bass extension though, as the size of the body producing the wave is relevant. 25 2" drivers will never produce an 18Hz wave even though the surface area would be the same as a 10" driver. 2" drivers just aren't capable of that kind of extension... excursion can only compensate so much before it causes unacceptable distortion.But, remember, LBJ was president then.

I think I did mention that there were more factors involved. Excursion was one of 'em.

kexodusc
07-18-2007, 03:52 AM
Thank you for your reply, very in-depth! I learn something every day. Something else however, what if in a tower speaker, you see alot of 6 1/2, 7 1/2 woofers, mabye 2 in one speaker cabinet. In a good speaker cabinet design, I'm wondering if 2 - 6 1/2 woofers are able to equal the bass output & quality of a 10" or larger driver?

As canuckle mentioned, there's more than just excursion to consider.
Those 2 6-1/2" drivers probably won't have as low a frequency of resonance as a 10" woofer in a similar application despite moving almost as much air. We're back to trade-offs again.

But don't worry, there's a lot of good speakers these days that are tuned reasonably low (ported designs) that will produce decent quality bass with just 1 or 2 6-1/2 woofers that covers most of the musical spectrum.

If you really want to get that last bottom octave, you can always add a subwoofer. When properly used, I would argue a good subwoofer is a much better investment than going from a bookshelf to a tower speaker just to add a woofer or two and get a few extra Hz. A lot of companies charge ridiculous amounts extra to go from the small bookshelf monitor to their matching tower speaker. And usually, in my experience, the bookshelf/subwoofer combo will sound better and be more cost-effective for a number of reasons.

Sub used to be frowned upon by alot audiophile traditionalist types. Early on nobody knew how to use them properly, and there weren't many good sounding, affordable models either, so I'm not surprised. In the last 3 or 4 years or so subs have come a long way, and people's understanding of how to use them has grown as well. They're cheaper, more powerful, better sounding, and more sophisticated than just a few years ago. It's been sort of a quiet revolution. But it all comes back to the lower resonance frequencies, lower distortion, and ability to sweep larger volumes of air that gives subwoofer's a big advantage.

emorphien
07-18-2007, 04:42 AM
There are a number of speakers with 5-7" drivers that can reach down to 40Hz with enough SPL to create a fairly full range listening experience. My bookshelf speakers are an example of this, using a 5.5" driver. Below 40Hz you've got mostly organs or electronic music and I don't listen to either enough to feel I'm missing out on anything. In the future when I'm not so limited by budget and space I am certain I would pursue something that could reach lower but at 40Hz you're really getting the most out of a lot of music.

Small drivers vs large drivers depends a lot on implementation and component choice. I do find that speakers with smaller drivers sometimes have better immediacy or transient response but it's not a guarantee. Same for subwoofers, I've not been a fan of most systems I've heard based around woofers much larger than 12 or 13", most of the subs I enjoyed best were in the 8-13" range and some designs based around 8-10" woofers (such as the Martin Logan Depth which I enjoyed and was delighted to see my parents purchase) had the immediacy I've found to be better with some smaller drivers and the depth and punch of bigger woofers. But with the new drive systems and everything, the larger woofers are a lot better than they used to be.

kexodusc
07-18-2007, 04:44 AM
This is not necessarily true and really depends on the application. A smaller driver has the advantage of speed and clarity within its optimal operating range.

I think this was almost universally true at one point in time. Today, larger woofer's are not "slower" unless they have a relatively weaker motor system (with respect to the mass of the woofer).

Consider 3 woofers, a 6", 10" and 15" unit, all used in cabinets with system Q's of 0.707.
Each woofer is asked to play a 40Hz tone at 90 dB (I use this example because I have tests with woofers of the same product line/motor designs).
The 6" woofer requires 6.7 mm of excursion (which could be problematic since many only have 4-6 mm available.
The 10" woofer requires 2.3 mm of excursion (max of 8 mm)
The 15" woofer requires exactly 1 mm of excursion (max of 10 mm).

It's easy to see the larger woofers operating at much lower stress need to move shorter distances, and remain well within the realm of their motor's optimal operating range. The lower and louder the music you play, the "faster and clearer" you can expect a larger woofer to perform. The 15" woofer barely has to do anything at all compared to the 6' woofer which is operating near 100% of it's abilities.

RGA
07-18-2007, 05:43 AM
Cocopeep.

Basically all you have to do here is listen to some of these. Plenty of speakers for example claim 40hz which for most music is fine but what type of 40hz are you getting. Play bass heavy music on my "built for rock" Wharfedale Vanguards at 110db and then play a Totem Model One at very high level on bass heavy techno trance with synthesizers that cover the entire bandwidth and it will be very easy to see that the small drive and small cabinet of the Model One has traded a LOT. But they are wife friendly and apartment living friendly and look sexy and at low levels hooked up to a Denon like mini-system not too bad - pricey but...that is subjective.

Listening to a lot of the big loudspeakers of yesteryear here in Korea (which is odd since space is a premium yet wide baffle high efficiency is the thing to get here) big drivers big cabinets have a visceral appeal that small speakers simply don't possess. In fact all small standmounts make me immediately want to add a subwoofer and I have never heard a sub/sat that sounded good (impressive though but that is different).

Even my speakers while standmounts are physically large and being designed for corners are aided immensely in terms of sensitivity and bass depth by the corner loading. I am pleased by the results - Hi-Fi Choice measured my standmount as 25hz -3db (89.5 db not in corners which means 92-94db in corners) and can play to 108db without dropping under 5ohms...the woofers are very low excursion - they barely move even under heavy bass at high volumes. Meanwhile the Wharfedales with the same music flap like someone standing in front of an armed Dick Cheney.

Granted one could argue the accuracy of the big JBL speakers of yesteryear but boy are some of these a lot of fun. It's a shame their management did some stupid things and the products and name value is in the dumper. I'd like to see what could have been done with better cabinets and internal caps, wiring, crossovers, and drivers.

The other thing you might want to check is the parts quality - sometimes the marketing is there to hide the "we use cheaper ass small drivers and cheaper ass wood and less of it, but we can write baffle gab white papers and charts to illustrate that cheap crap is better." The speaker industry is no different than any other field where marketing convinces that good is bad and bad is good. IMO

E-Stat
07-18-2007, 07:28 AM
I owned a pair of late-model 710's under the Braun label -- very nice speakers for sure.
We sold many a very good system using a Sonus cartridge in a Philips 212 table with an H-K receiver (430/730) driving 710s/810s.

rw

E-Stat
07-18-2007, 07:50 AM
Is it possible that a speaker with an 6 inch woofer can outperform a 10 inch woofer given the right cabinet, quality of driver and power input? I would also think that a smaller woofer compared to a 15 inch would produce a tighter, cleaner bass, no?
One factor I haven't heard discussed yet is that of coherency, an important characteristic to me. The "tightness" you mention in bass is largely determined by its upper or mid bass performance, not at the bottom per se. The challenge with using large woofers is getting them transitioned seamlessly to the upper drivers at the upper part of their range. In some designs, one is aware of The Bass, The Midrange, and The Treble.

As of late, I have developed a greater appreciation for the value of treating room bass nodes. All rooms are inherently non linear in their bass response. Equalization is an obvious answer, but can involve some sonic compromises IMHO if run full range. For my HT system, I chose to use a relatively high crossover point from the Polk bookshelves (using a 6" woofer) to the powered 12" subs. While the Polk's respond to 50 hz, I wanted to use the EQ to flatten all the room nodes up to 200 hz via the subs. That has worked out very well.

rw

emorphien
07-18-2007, 10:29 AM
Basically all you have to do here is listen to some of these. Plenty of speakers for example claim 40hz which for most music is fine but what type of 40hz are you getting.
Exactly. That's one reason Totem makes pretty specific statements about what room sizes the speakers are intended for so you can get reasonable output at 40Hz. You won't get deafening output compared to larger speakers and if you're a basshead or listen to lots of the synth stuff it'll fall off on you but aside from that, and in a room that isn't too big, you can get good/satisfying/acceptable output down to 40Hz from those bookshelf speakers.

In short, I agree with you. It depends on a few things.

canuckle
07-18-2007, 03:04 PM
But, remember, LBJ was president then.
LB who? :p

:lol:

RGA
07-19-2007, 04:19 AM
Exactly. That's one reason Totem makes pretty specific statements about what room sizes the speakers are intended for so you can get reasonable output at 40Hz. You won't get deafening output compared to larger speakers and if you're a basshead or listen to lots of the synth stuff it'll fall off on you but aside from that, and in a room that isn't too big, you can get good/satisfying/acceptable output down to 40Hz from those bookshelf speakers.

In short, I agree with you. It depends on a few things.

Well My reservations on Totem go beyond this but it is my taste. I am not about cranking to deafening levels because I don't, after all, want to go deaf. I hate generalizing but I do so here because it has always been my experience. The problem with very small speakers like the Model One and most other standmounts (such as the much bigger B&W 705) of low efficiency is that to get them to sound open and unboxy I feel the need to turn the volume up and up to make things out clearly. The lack of headroom then becomes an issue because these speakers don't tend to sound very good at low volume and they can;t play at loud volumes so now I have a huge problem with them. HE speakers tend to sound far more open at low levels. With my main speakers I don;t feel the need to turn it up to hear the bass or turn it up to make out the midrange. With the Model One even in a small room with powerful amplifiers it has numerous problems that for the price just don;t make sense to me.

I always walk away saying "great bass for their size - truly remarkable really - BUT in absolute terms the bass is not deep, it is not good at dynamics, it doesn't sound open or visceral and they cost a lot of money. To me it's a style oriented loudspeaker maker with good sound compared to other style oriented loudspeaker makers like Bose or Bang and Ollufson. But the Higher end dealers in the west had trouble selling them and so Totem jumped ship and moved into the big box chain A&B Sound. IMO that is the kiss of death. The high end dealers will never take them back - and they won't really sell at the prices Totem wants long term because if A&B does not sell them they will drop Totem or demand lower prices and that will force Totem to cheap out.

The Mani-2 is much better but at the price it too IMO has troubles and I mean the $3500.00 price you can buy them for not the $5000.00 list price. (Cad)

O'Shag
07-19-2007, 12:36 PM
I think this was almost universally true at one point in time. Today, larger woofer's are not "slower" unless they have a relatively weaker motor system (with respect to the mass of the woofer).

Consider 3 woofers, a 6", 10" and 15" unit, all used in cabinets with system Q's of 0.707.
Each woofer is asked to play a 40Hz tone at 90 dB (I use this example because I have tests with woofers of the same product line/motor designs).
The 6" woofer requires 6.7 mm of excursion (which could be problematic since many only have 4-6 mm available.
The 10" woofer requires 2.3 mm of excursion (max of 8 mm)
The 15" woofer requires exactly 1 mm of excursion (max of 10 mm).

It's easy to see the larger woofers operating at much lower stress need to move shorter distances, and remain well within the realm of their motor's optimal operating range. The lower and louder the music you play, the "faster and clearer" you can expect a larger woofer to perform. The 15" woofer barely has to do anything at all compared to the 6' woofer which is operating near 100% of it's abilities.

Interesting and well explained response. The point about the motor and excursion makes a lot of sense.:idea:

kexodusc
07-19-2007, 01:04 PM
Interesting and well explained response. The point about the motor and excursion makes a lot of sense.:idea:
Of course, when it comes to woofers I'm not aware of many 15" woofers that can be crossed over at 2000-3000 Hz in a 2-way system, lol. Larger drivers typically give up some midrange performance for the bass improvements...how the driver is used plays into it a lot as well.

emorphien
07-19-2007, 01:09 PM
Well My reservations on Totem go beyond this but it is my taste. I am not about cranking to deafening levels because I don't, after all, want to go deaf. I hate generalizing but I do so here because it has always been my experience. The problem with very small speakers like the Model One and most other standmounts (such as the much bigger B&W 705) of low efficiency is that to get them to sound open and unboxy I feel the need to turn the volume up and up to make things out clearly. The lack of headroom then becomes an issue because these speakers don't tend to sound very good at low volume and they can;t play at loud volumes so now I have a huge problem with them. HE speakers tend to sound far more open at low levels. With my main speakers I don;t feel the need to turn it up to hear the bass or turn it up to make out the midrange. With the Model One even in a small room with powerful amplifiers it has numerous problems that for the price just don;t make sense to me.

I always walk away saying "great bass for their size - truly remarkable really - BUT in absolute terms the bass is not deep, it is not good at dynamics, it doesn't sound open or visceral and they cost a lot of money. To me it's a style oriented loudspeaker maker with good sound compared to other style oriented loudspeaker makers like Bose or Bang and Ollufson. But the Higher end dealers in the west had trouble selling them and so Totem jumped ship and moved into the big box chain A&B Sound. IMO that is the kiss of death. The high end dealers will never take them back - and they won't really sell at the prices Totem wants long term because if A&B does not sell them they will drop Totem or demand lower prices and that will force Totem to cheap out.
It is and can be a problem, but I don't find the need to play them or most other small standmount speakers at high volume to get them to really open up. I did notice this with some speakers, but with others (including the Eras and some other speakers) sound open and "unboxy" at low levels. As far as the problems selling them, I haven't seen anything like that with Totem or other small speaker brands here in the east. Don't know what you mean by A&B either, but after listening to a variety of things both in big box and high end dealers I came away with a handful of favorites of which the Totems were included.

I certainly did notice what you are talking about with other speaker brands, including some of the popular B&W and Paradigm models but what I liked so much about the Totems was they bucked that trend. The Focals were able to as well but with a different overall tonal balance and my second favorite would have been some of the PSB standmount speakers.

Certainly though, if I were to use them in a larger room then that wouldn't work. Most of these standmount speakers become boxed in and you lose the visceral impact in a larger room. But even at low levels in smaller listening rooms the visceral impact and bass depth out of many of the standmounts was satisfying (although for some it simply wasn't there too, or was either very sloppy or not really getting enough below 60Hz to fill in the bottom end suitably).

GMichael
07-19-2007, 01:13 PM
Will big dogs always have bigger woofers than small dogs? And which ones will have less distortion? Can I have three small dogs woof as good and one big dog? Which ones will be faster? I would think that the smaller dogs would be quicker but the big dog would be faster in the long haul. What do you think?

cocopeep
07-19-2007, 01:29 PM
Will big dogs always have bigger woofers than small dogs? And which ones will have less distortion? Can I have three small dogs woof as good and one big dog? Which ones will be faster? I would think that the smaller dogs would be quicker but the big dog would be faster in the long haul. What do you think?
Thats a good point even a caveman can understand!

O'Shag
07-19-2007, 03:04 PM
I'm currently listening to Sirius Satellite Area 33 (rave/trance) - don't knock me about, I listen to every type of music - Bloomin 'eck but the Spectron 1KWs (1000watts!!) I just got are the darned fastest amps I've ever heard. The bass is unbelievable. They leave my Mark Levinson No. 27 monos and ARC Classic 150 monos in the dust, and they're both excellent. The Monitor Audio Gold Reference 60s have two six inch ceramic woofers per side in a ported disign. I'm wondering how 2 really fast 15" woofers per side will sound with the spectron driving them. Bloody heck, all the neighbours would think there's an earthquake.

kexodusc
07-19-2007, 03:53 PM
I'm currently listening to Sirius Satellite Area 33 (rave/trance) - don't knock me about, I listen to every type of music - Bloomin 'eck but the Spectron 1KWs (1000watts!!) I just got are the darned fastest amps I've ever heard. The bass is unbelievable. They leave my Mark Levinson No. 27 monos and ARC Classic 150 monos in the dust, and they're both excellent. The Monitor Audio Gold Reference 60s have two six inch ceramic woofers per side in a ported disign. I'm wondering how 2 really fast 15" woofers per side will sound with the spectron driving them. Bloody heck, all the neighbours would think there's an earthquake.

Here ya go...except I'd opt for the 18" version....lemme know if ya get the urge, I'd love to design a sealed or ported subwoofer with these... :thumbsup:

http://www.tcsounds.com/lms5400.htm

Check out the size of the grizzly magnet - :yikes:

These ain't your neighbor's kid's trunk kicker's....75 lbs of glorious bass...

O'Shag
07-19-2007, 06:16 PM
Wow! Kexodusc, those woofers look amazing. The magnet is enormous. They use a metal woofer material. Have you tried these? Also, are there disadvantage to using seperate subwoofers as opposed to a single enclosure?

GMichael
07-20-2007, 05:35 AM
Here ya go...except I'd opt for the 18" version....lemme know if ya get the urge, I'd love to design a sealed or ported subwoofer with these... :thumbsup:

http://www.tcsounds.com/lms5400.htm

Check out the size of the grizzly magnet - :yikes:

These ain't your neighbor's kid's trunk kicker's....75 lbs of glorious bass...

I think I just wet myself. What amp would you use for these?

kexodusc
07-20-2007, 05:47 AM
Wow! Kexodusc, those woofers look amazing. The magnet is enormous. They use a metal woofer material. Have you tried these?
I haven't used these particular subs - the highest I've ever personally heard is their TC-5200 model which is a step below and a few hundred less - it was used with some big expensive Maggies and added a real vibrant kick at the bottom end that totally elevated the overall performance that system could generate. The owner debated a long time before deciding on incorporating separate subwoofers. In hindsight, he admits he probably could have improved his system with woofers at 1/3 the cost, but he's extremely happy now.

Nothing wrong with metallic woofers - in smaller mid-woofers there's often a few break-up nodes. This gave metal drivers a bad rap-sheet decades ago when lower, simpler crossovers were used. In truth the problem is easy to solve with a good crossover - look at all those high-end speaker manufacturers who use Seas and Scan-speak drivers.

For sub purposes, there'll be at least a 12 dB/octave filter on the sub, plus the natural roll-off of the driver, so any break-up (if present at all) would be alleviated. You could put a filter in the design yourself if need as well, I suppose.



Also, are there disadvantage to using separate subwoofers as opposed to a single enclosure?

I'd argue using separate subs outside the speaker enclosure offers more benefits than having the bass source incorporated into the enclosure when trying to achieve optima performance.

Room acoustics play a bigger part in the sound below 100 Hz than arguably even the speakers themselves. It's a fact that the best place for the bass transducer is rarely the best place for stereo speaker performance in the mid-range and higher frequencies. Depending where you position the subs, and what frequency you select, any phase problems can be made a non-issue. If you place them beside symmetrically beside the towers, but perhaps closer to the walls/corners you're fine. The further off-axis you go,the lower you'll need to set your xo, however. I'm not aware of many subs that don't have a phase-adjustment option. And this phase alignment isn't anything dramatically different from the phase alignment your speaker's crossovers have built into them, anyway. Our ability to resolve incoherencies diminishes greatly below 100 Hz, so the tolerance range for optimum performance thankfully is considerably more forgiving.

The downside is that adding subs will definitely increase the complexity of set-up. It'll take a some reading, learning, and definitely some trial and error. Just adding a subwoofer or two in a corner and setting the crossover at arbitrarily low position like 40 Hz isn't going to guarantee success. I think a lot of people are just happy enough with what they have to not bother. Incorporating two more big boxes into a room isn't always a viable option in the household for a number of reasons. Budget, perceived value, etc. Nothing wrong with that. Those that do go this extra step though are happy they did.

basite
07-20-2007, 06:02 AM
I think I just wet myself. What amp would you use for these?


yeah, me too :)


something with 1 KW at least...




... per voice coil...

that thing will bring a house down...

btw, best sub I ever heard till now was a REL studio III in an uber expensive HT setup (at a high end shop), however it 'only' had 2 10" drivers, it gave the most gigantic bass i've ever heard in a HT setup :)

kexodusc
07-20-2007, 06:23 AM
I think I just wet myself. What amp would you use for these?

Whatever you want, I guess.
I've sort of fallen for these two models after some demonstrations that have me rethinking my beliefs about amplifiers. I'm not even going to go into that out of fear of being flamed.
This is probably what I'm going to buy for my IB setup.
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&Partnumber=248-745

I helped one guy in town build his IB setup. He uses the 2500 model (a bit more power) than the above, and also has 3 inexpensive Crown amps in his home theater :
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&DID=7&Partnumber=245-465
I couldn't believe how good this thing sounded running his PMC speakers, of all things.

There's some excellent sounding QSC and Crown amps out there as well that probably have a bit more power if you want bragging rights:
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&Partnumber=245-642

I'm going to stop now before people gang up on me.

kexodusc
07-20-2007, 06:29 AM
btw, best sub I ever heard till now was a REL studio III in an uber expensive HT setup (at a high end shop), however it 'only' had 2 10" drivers, it gave the most gigantic bass i've ever heard in a HT setup :)

I'm not completely shocked. There's benefits to multiple drivers in some applications vs 1 big expensive driver with long excursion - I doubt REL even bothers offering a 18" subwoofer. I'm guessing not too many wives would let that fly. Coming from a guy who's thinking 4 15" woofers for my next sub. :out:

GMichael
07-20-2007, 06:30 AM
Whatever you want, I guess.
I've sort of fallen for these two models after some demonstrations that have me rethinking my beliefs about amplifiers. I'm not even going to go into that out of fear of being flamed.
This is probably what I'm going to buy for my IB setup.
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&Partnumber=248-745

I helped one guy in town build his IB setup. He uses the 2500 model (a bit more power) than the above, and also has 3 inexpensive Crown amps in his home theater :
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&DID=7&Partnumber=245-465
I couldn't believe how good this thing sounded running his PMC speakers, of all things.

There's some excellent sounding QSC and Crown amps out there as well that probably have a bit more power if you want bragging rights:
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&Partnumber=245-642

I'm going to stop now before people gang up on me.

I would think that any of these would do a good job. Number 3 looks best but number 1 seems to be the best "fit" for the buck.

GMichael
07-20-2007, 06:32 AM
I'm not completely shocked. There's benefits to multiple drivers in some applications vs 1 big expensive driver with long excursion - I doubt REL even bothers offering a 18" subwoofer. I'm guessing not too many wives would let that fly. Coming from a guy who's thinking 4 15" woofers for my next sub. :out:

How about 2 of those 18"ers and amp number 3?

Luvin Da Blues
07-20-2007, 06:44 AM
Those that do go this extra step though are happy they did.


:) :) :) :) :) :) :) :) :) :)

kexodusc
07-20-2007, 07:03 AM
How about 2 of those 18"ers and amp number 3?
Take your pick, there's lots of big monoblocks out there and you really could spend as much as you want.
For me, I could get buy on a couple hundred watts a side, and would rather spend the money on the subwoofers themselves. Don't want to go too cheap, but we're not going to resolve the finer subtleties with 18" drivers either, so a top end Krell or whatever is probably overkill.

Feanor
07-20-2007, 07:27 AM
Wow! Kexodusc, those woofers look amazing. The magnet is enormous. They use a metal woofer material. Have you tried these? Also, are there disadvantage to using seperate subwoofers as opposed to a single enclosure?

'Shag, I assuming you're asking about multiple subwoofers vs. a "full range" speaker?

One potential advantage of a pair of subwoofers, one for each channel, is a higher crossover point than possible with a single subwoofer. The limit for hi-fi sound from a single subwoofer is no higher than 80Hz which is where sound be becomes directional. If you have "stereo" subwoofers you can raise this as high as you like within the capabilities of the subwoofers themselve, e.g. 100, 120, even 200Hz.

To do this, you ought to have not only low-pass filters for your subwoofers but also high-pass for you main speakers: it is important to keep the low frequencies out of the latter in the interest of better balance, lower distortion, and greater power handling without destroying your main speakers.

hermanv
07-23-2007, 07:07 PM
Hey guys, are you so young that you forgot about the sweet 16. It used 16, 5" drivers wired series parallel so as to maintain the either 4 or 8 Ohm driver impedance. The designer reasoned that 16 x 5" diameter drivers had the same surface area as one 20" driver. The math was good but the principle is not.

Drivers have a parameter usually called Fs or Fo this is the natural frequency of the cone (mass) and the spring of the support structure (surround and spider). A typical 5" driver may have an Fs of 60Hz. Drivers will not produce useful sound pressures at any frequency lower than Fs.

cocopeep
07-24-2007, 07:53 AM
So you are saying that you can have as many 5 inch drivers together in a cabinet but cannot go below 60 Hz?

hermanv
07-24-2007, 08:02 AM
Not exactly. I'm saying you can't go below Fs of the driver. I found one 5 1/4" driver that had an Fs of 31.5Hz. So one or more of them would reach 31.5 Hz. the advantage of more drivers is smaller cone excursion per dB SPL of output.

kexodusc
07-24-2007, 10:52 AM
Not exactly. I'm saying you can't go below Fs of the driver. I found one 5 1/4" driver that had an Fs of 31.5Hz. So one or more of them would reach 31.5 Hz. the advantage of more drivers is smaller cone excursion per dB SPL of output.

To expand on what hermanv is saying:

Contrary to popular belief, woofers can and do play well below their Fs (even in free air), they just don't do as efficiently, or very well (distortion, max excursion, etc - ever hear that warbly farting noise some smalls subs make?) The amount of sound output of the speaker per given unit of energy falls at 12 dB per ocatve below the resonance. But it's not a hard cutoff where the speaker doesn't make any more sound output.

Fs refers to the free air resonant frequency of the driver. Ie, suspend a driver on a string from the ceiling, not in a box. How many speaker systems do you know operate in free air?

When you put the driver in a ported box, the acoustic roll off changes - 24 db for ported systems per octave. The resonant frequency of the "system" (or resonant frequency of the driver in a given box) also changes for both sealed and ported enclosures.
Depending on how you tune the box, you can easily go below the Fs of the driver in an ported design. If a 5" speaker had a Fs at 31.5, I'd expect a ported system to play even lower...especially in most typical home room sizes. Depending on room acoustics, you can achieve flat response below Fs in a sealed design too, a bit more difficult though.

hermanv
07-24-2007, 07:07 PM
To expand on what hermanv is saying:

Contrary to popular belief, woofers can and do play well below their Fs (even in free air), they just don't do as efficiently, or very well (distortion, max excursion, etc - ever hear that warbly farting noise some smalls subs make?) The amount of sound output of the speaker per given unit of energy falls at 12 dB per ocatve below the resonance. But it's not a hard cutoff where the speaker doesn't make any more sound output.

Fs refers to the free air resonant frequency of the driver. Ie, suspend a driver on a string from the ceiling, not in a box. How many speaker systems do you know operate in free air?
Well I've been wrong before, probably even today. I believe Fs is traditonally measured in an infinite baffle or the Europeans seem to be fond of a 1 meter square baffle. This is not the same as free air resonance. As you point out drivers are never run this way so providing the Fs specification that way provides no help to the speaker designer in chosing a driver.

For me at least, the goal is flat frequency response, yes the cone still moves below Fs not only is efficiency shot to hell, so are the distortion numbers. The curve is so steep that equalizing for it is generally unwise . Take your example; if you wanted to equalize for a 24 dB error (12 dB from the driver plus another 12 dB for the box, the speaker is mounted in) for one ocatve you need 24 db more power. If the system is running at 1 watt you'll need 254 watts at that low equalization point. Or if you are running at 10 watts suddenly 2,540 watts are needed, the driver will not like this. Of course you will enjoy the advantage of being able to examine the cone from all sides since it will most likely land in your lap :) :)

Many modern speakers will use 2 six inch drivers or 2 eight inch drivers for their woofer. These are almost always custom driver units made especially for this job. High excursion, low Fs and hopefully low distortion. This idea became much more popular as home theater systems couldn''t afford the cost or the space for good low frequency performance.

kexodusc
07-25-2007, 04:43 AM
Well I've been wrong before, probably even today.
LOL, according to my wife I can't do anything right...


I believe Fs is traditonally measured in an infinite baffle or the Europeans seem to be fond of a 1 meter square baffle..
That's correct, some of the companies in Denmark use some odd ball shaped baffles but after a meter or so it works for measurment purposes.


This is not the same as free air resonance. As you point out drivers are never run this way so providing the Fs specification that way provides no help to the speaker designer in chosing a driver.
No that's not accurate. The Fs taken this way is absolutely useful, and necessary. If you don't know the Fs as provided, you'll have a hell of a time designing an enclosure to achieve a flat response, good power handling, optimum bass extension, etc. You wouldn't know where to start. The trial and error would be tedious, expensive, and time consuming.

Again, for determining the free-air resonant frequency of the driver, an infinite baffle (or quasi-infinite baffle for the smaller weird shapes) doesn't put the driver in an enclosure, so there's no resistance against the driver's movement, and it's not going to have any impact on the compliance and damping of the driver that would change the resonant frequency. Effectively, for this Fs measurement it is free-air.

FWIW, I believe simple action-reaction is the reason they don't actually suspend a driver from a string. Instead of the woofer moving the air, the woofer would act like a motor and move itself some as well and a lot of energy would be wasted...though to be honest, I've never looked into that and I could be wrong. Also, when they test the woofer's T/S parameters on a wide baffle, they're usually also measuring frequency response. You need the wide baffle so the frequency responce doesn't include any baffle step loss.


For me at least, the goal is flat frequency response, yes the cone still moves below Fs not only is efficiency shot to hell, so are the distortion numbers. The curve is so steep that equalizing for it is generally unwise . Take your example; if you wanted to equalize for a 24 dB error (12 dB from the driver plus another 12 dB for the box, the speaker is mounted in) for one ocatve you need 24 db more power. If the system is running at 1 watt you'll need 254 watts at that low equalization point. Or if you are running at 10 watts suddenly 2,540 watts are needed, the driver will not like this. Of course you will enjoy the advantage of being able to examine the cone from all sides since it will most likely land in your lap :) :).

I hope the goal for everyone is reasonably flat frequency response :) Of course there's at least one company who shall remain nameless BOSE that seems to care little.

You're absolutely right, distortion will increase as the power required to drive the speaker to a certain volume increases, but it's not fair to say the distortion numbers are shot to hell immediately below Fs - there's still a fair amount of sound below Fs at decent volume that can be squeezed out of the driver, depending on the application, and of course depending on the quality of the driver. A lot of speakers are designed to output frequencies below the Fs of the driver.

You raise a good point in your power/dB exercise - in ported sytems, there's an increase of power required to maintain volume. The further away from the resonant frequency you move, the more power you'll need. The first several Hz aren't so bad, and can often be EQ'd if someone really wants to (in a sub I could see, in a speaker I'd have to ask why), but much further than that as you pointed out, and the power requirements get pretty ridiculous. The 24 dB you used applies only to the frequency 1 octave away from the resonant frequency of the speaker system with a ported enclosure, Fb (which can and most often is significantly lower than Fs).

Also, in practice, a lot of sealed speakers and infinite baffle systems depend on matching the roll-off of the driver with the transfer function of the room it will be played in to extend the low frequency. If you look at some of the IB subs Tom Nousaine and others have had in Stereophile and other mags over the years, they often include decent excursion and power handling, and eq'ing to push the driver down to 10 Hz is used. A bit excessive to me but Tom likes his bass I guess :) I've heard but 2 IB sub systems, nothing fancy or expensive, and it just sounds so much better it's absolutely incredible - but that's another thread.



Many modern speakers will use 2 six inch drivers or 2 eight inch drivers for their woofer. These are almost always custom driver units made especially for this job. High excursion, low Fs and hopefully low distortion. This idea became much more popular as home theater systems couldn''t afford the cost or the space for good low frequency performance.
I'm not sure I understand what you're saying here? A lot of mulit-woofer designs use a 2nd woofer for a variety of reasons, ie, MTM alignments, where more bass is just an afterthought.

I'm guessing that sweet 16 speaker was a line array - to counter the 24 dB/octave roll-off if it was ported (or 12 dB roll-off if it was sealed), the guy probably designed the crossover so that 4 or 8 woofers were responsible for a common passband in the bass region - the added gain from compounding the drivers would offset the roll-off.
There's a lot of very impressive speakers designed as such with incredibly low distortion - but I tend to agree with you - why use a 16 5" woofers to when 2 5" woofers and a big ol' 12" can get the job done with far less complexity, size, and cost?

cocopeep
08-08-2007, 05:38 PM
My question is, if a 12 inch woofer is in a 3 cubic foot cabinet sealed, and compare that to the same 12 inch woofer in a 3 cu ft. cabinet with a bass port, would one have more bass than the other? I am just curious:idea:

markw
08-08-2007, 06:35 PM
My question is, if a 12 inch woofer is in a 3 cubic foot cabinet sealed, and compare that to the same 12 inch woofer in a 3 cu ft. cabinet with a bass port, would one have more bass than the other? I am just curious:idea:You really like simple answers to questions with more variables than you want to realize, even after they have been pointed out to you.

Go back to the beginning of this thread and read it again.

Then, go pick up some books on speaker design and do a little research on yer own. Apparantly, three pages of sage advice from some quite knowledgeable members of this forum hasn't made a dent in that thick skull of yours.

Unless, of course, you're just trolling. In such case, jolly good show! You got all of us!

cocopeep
08-09-2007, 05:48 PM
You really like simple answers to questions with more variables than you want to realize, even after they have been pointed out to you.

Go back to the beginning of this thread and read it again.

Then, go pick up some books on speaker design and do a little research on yer own. Apparantly, three pages of sage advice from some quite knowledgeable members of this forum hasn't made a dent in that thick skull of yours.

Unless, of course, you're just trolling. In such case, jolly good show! You got all of us!
Oh no, its not that, and I thank you all for your input, as I learned much from your input(s). I did re-read the previous forums, and found that there is no one best partiular way of building or using a certain driver, as room size, amp power, cabinet, etc.etc can result in various ways of producing sound. Just found it intersting in some cabinet designs that some use front firing ports, rear ports and ports that aim to the floor to "pound" the floor with bass....