The best way is to measure everything from the sweet spot.
The filtering in Audiolense is capable of removing reflections that should not be accounted for.
I recommend that you protect your tweeters with a capacitor if you decide to go all digital. Use one that cuts the signal high enough to save the tweeter in case of a full range signal.
Going all digital leaves more work and judgment to you. You will be doing the speaker design work yourself. But it is worth doing if you want the best possible sound quality.
A lot of nonlinear distortion will be eliminated when the power amp is connected directly to the drivers. But how and where you set the crossovers will have a substantial influence on the sound quality too. I recommend a systematic, experimental approach, but you should do your homework and get the specs on those drivers. Find out their ideal working range, when the drivers start to break up at high frequencies, and how low you can use each driver before the capacity becomes an issue. Also, although not quite as important, it is a good idea to address dispersion pattern of each driver and the speaker as a whole. Aim for a smooth change of dispersion through the crossover. But to me the dispersion is 3rd priority. It is much more important to limit the drivers from operating outside their low distortion frequency range.
There is room for a vast improvement in sound quality compared to a passive crossover. Even if your passive and corrected speakers sound totally undistorted, you should achieve a significant improvement in purity and clarity when you go digital. It will sound more dynamic and detailed, yet more organic. When you start off with a passive speaker, provided you know the crossover frequencies, you should expect to achieve improvements pretty fast too.
Kind regards,
Bernt
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We can do a discussion on it when you get there – if you decide to do this, Dan
Kind regards,
Bernt
5uF will give a 1st order cutoff around 3 kHz. 10 uF will cut around 1.5kHz. I would go for the 1.5kHz if the driver can handle it. The capacitor will then interfere less (close to none) with operating range you’re getting at. The specs on the driver does not tell give a good indication of what it can handle of “low” frequency short term power. I recommend that you ask the manufacturer about that.
Perhaps some of the users here have experience with similar drivers?
Excellent info, Mitch!
Kind regards,
Bernt
From: audio...@googlegroups.com [mailto:audio...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Mitch Global
Sent: Wednesday, March 04, 2015 5:04 AM
To: Audiolense User Forum
Subject: Re: [audiolense] Active Crossover Measurement Technique
Re: protecting compression drivers and selecting the right capacitor value. Have a look at the guidance from JBL attached to figure out the proper values.. I use Solen Fastcap: VIPRE Anti-phishing removed a known bad URL from your email message. It was deleted or quarantined and replaced with this message. and have measured and listened to them in and out of the circuit and could not measure or hear a difference. Based on the price of the BMS drivers, well worth the protection.
The BMS compression drivers are very nice. I use a BMS 4540 with a QSC constant directivity waveguide and very happy with the sound quality and coverage.
Good luck with your project!
On Tue, Mar 3, 2015 at 4:20 PM, Dan Waleke <d...@nowkw.com> wrote:
Thank you. Â
The speakers that I have are JTR 212HT for my L/R and a custom JTR 228HT w/212HT coaxial compression driver (to match L/R), but 8" woofers instead of 12" for a smaller cabinet.
The Tweeter/Mid is a coaxial compression driver - BMS 4593ND mounted to an 18Sound XR1464 60x40 pattern horn with 1.4" throat. BMS recommends a 6.3Khz between tweeter/mid (300hz->22khz) and the speakers have a ~400hz crossover to the woofers (MTM design). I have attached some graphs that I was able to find on the BMS driver.  I do not have any data on the woofers unfortunately.  I plan on using midbass modules for the left/right speakers between 60-180hz. So the MTM woofers will only play between ~180-400hz.
It seems as long as I stick to similar crossover points I should be able to achieve pretty good results to start. At least that is my hope.
Based on what I have posted can you recommend the right capacitor to protect the tweeter?
On Tuesday, March 3, 2015 at 12:41:17 PM UTC-5, BerntR wrote:
The best way is to measure everything from the sweet spot.
Â
The filtering in Audiolense is capable of removing reflections that should not be accounted for.
Â
I recommend that you protect your tweeters with a capacitor if you decide to go all digital. Use one that cuts the signal high enough to save the tweeter in case of a full range signal.
Â
Going all digital leaves more work and judgment to you. You will be doing the speaker design work yourself. But it is worth doing if you want the best possible sound quality.
Â
A lot of nonlinear distortion will be eliminated when the power amp is connected directly to the drivers. But how and where you set the crossovers will  have a substantial influence on the sound quality too. I recommend a systematic, experimental approach, but you should do your homework and get the specs on those drivers. Find out their ideal working range, when the drivers start to break up at high frequencies, and how low you can use each driver before the capacity becomes an issue. Also, although not quite as important, it is a good idea to address dispersion pattern of each driver and the speaker as a whole. Aim for a smooth change of dispersion through the crossover. But to me the dispersion is 3rd priority. It is much more important to limit the drivers from operating outside their low distortion frequency range.
Â
There is room for a vast improvement in sound quality compared to a passive crossover. Even if your passive and corrected speakers sound totally undistorted, you should achieve a significant improvement in purity and clarity when you go digital. It will sound more dynamic and detailed, yet more organic. When you start off with a passive speaker, provided you know the crossover frequencies, you should expect to achieve improvements pretty fast too.
Â
Kind regards,
Â
Bernt
Â
From: audio...@googlegroups.com [mailto:audio...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dan Waleke
Sent: Tuesday, March 03, 2015 5:02 PM
To: audio...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [audiolense] Active Crossover Measurement Technique
Â
I've done some searching and I looked through the help file and I didn't really see much specific information on this topic.
Â
What is the best way to perform measurements when using Audiolense XO for active crossovers?
Â
I've seen a lot of people take nearfield measurements for the active crossover part and then measurements at the main listening position to correct the room.
Â
I have a 5.2 surround sound system and I am considering removing the passive crossovers from my speakers and just let Audiolense handle everything active.
Â
h;te ÜðÒ’ô
Hi Masis,
I use compression drivers in my 3 way digital XO system using Audiolense.
You should be able to find the appropriate protection cap with wiring diagram here: https://www.markertek.com/attachments/ATS004711.pdf
Best practice is to select a capacitor that is active at approximately one octave below the crossover frequency, assuring minimal acoustic interference with crossover region performance while maintaining a good degree of protection.
So in your case, if 8 ohm driver and XO at 1600 Hz, then the protection cap should be active an octave lower, at 800 Hz and looking up in the chart says a value of 25 uf. I use Solen fast cap like this: https://solen.ca/products/capacitors/fast-capacitors-400v-pb-series-metallized-polypropylene/pb2400/
While Dan’s post is 5 years ago, (would love to know how it turned out J) wrt to measurements and digital XO. Have a look in the Audiolense help file re: digital XO.
“When digital crossovers are handled by Audiolense, the correction is made in two steps. First each driver is time frequency corrected individually, then the sum of the individual drivers are corrected as a combined unit.
When True Time Domain Correction is checked, the whole speaker will be time domain corrected as one single entity. This is the only TTD option for passive speakers. The option “TTD Correction per driver” will also be visible when digital crossovers are used. Checking this option will also time domain correct each driver individually before the speaker is assembled and corrected as a whole. The experience so far is that it varies from system to system whether this option is beneficial or not.”
Personally, I find it very beneficial. One does not need nearfield measurements in the case of Audiolense and digital XO. Lots of fun!
Kind regards,
Mitch
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Hey Dan,
Thanks for the update!
Curious to know about the other sources?
Kind regards,
Mitch
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Hi Dan,
FYI, it is quite easy to route anything through the jriver convolver, internal source or hooked up to the computer.
I hope you made the right choice.
Mvh,
Bernt
From: audio...@googlegroups.com [mailto:audio...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dan Waleke
Sent: tirsdag 25. august 2020 15:50
To: Audiolense User Forum
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I use Netflix, Amazon Prime etc.
But you’re probably right about Dolby Atmos. Anything that is encrypted and protected is difficult to manage.
Mvh,
Bernt
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