And do you do this?Simulations are not accurate. Engineers knows this, so they figure in the tolerance. Thiele and Small provides some part to help simulate. They treated the speaker driver as a circuit and a simulations follow by adding nested circuits to simulate sealed, vented, bandpass, passive radiator.
So you've never built something yourself. Great.I helped someone build a subwoofer providing what volume and what tuning frequency. I said it may or may not perform well because of the simulations. The person said it worked great, but I could not to a listen test because of distance problems.
lolIt will take me over a week to calculate a design, so I did use Unibox. I also use WinISD Pro Alpha. I do not have to prove that.
Did you know that on the Internet, you can upload images to a multitude of file hosts without any personal data attached?I will not upload the images to my server, but prefer to have my name to be anonymous. It is not because of here or anywhere else. For personal stuff, I prefer to be anonymous. I prefer not to have a facebook and myspace account.
No, you didn't. You're talking out of your ass and you know it.I did prove it and you just do not like how I am saying it.
Fine and dandy, but if I do it your way with an example... values A and B are 200 and 100, respectively.To explain the difference about difference percentage and error percentage to someone like that should know how to read equations. If you insist on me to lecture on this simple equation, the following is word for word from wikipedia.
""""One final note to make is that a lot of confusion lies in mistakenly assuming that percent difference is the same as percent error. The difference is that percent difference is comparing two experimental values, whereas percent error compares one experimental value with the actual/accepted value.""""
Error Percentage Example:
Let us say you work in a lab and you got a thermometer with unheard of accuracy. You think the manufactures accuracy is bull, so you come up with an experiment. You do this by figuring out known controls to check the accuracy. Some known controls that could be used for the experiment is the temperature of boiling water or the temperature when water freezes. Let us say that you use boiling water. After some readings, you use the error percentage.
Difference Percentage Example:
Let us say that you are comparing two different CPU from a benchmark on anandtech. Since the benchmarks provides experimental values, but not as controls. You have to treat them as theoretical values. The only controls is the configuration in each program and the process how they did the benchmark.
(200-100)/(200+100) * 100% = 33.3%
Does this mean that 200 is 33.3% more than 100?
Pros of your design:Using a GR Research SW-12B 12 inch woofer and a 500 watt Bash amplifier. A 3 cubic feet tuned at around 23 Hz. Could use three 3 inch ports at a length of about 31 inches. To make it at this length, a 3 inch flexible pipe can be used with out causing the air to be restricted compared to using elbows. It will cost about $330. Sure it is more expensive, but it is smaller.
It's smaller
Cons of your design:
Has lower maximum SPL
Has lower sensitivity
It's more expensive
More difficult to build
Has more distortion (the SW-12B does not have shorting rings or any special features to reduce distortion relative to the RSS390, and it also requires more excursion for the same SPL which almost always increases distortion as well)
My point is, you are calling all distortion THD when THD means harmonic distortion only. Spurious noise (driver self noise or port chuffing) is not harmonically related to the input signal.Distortions are anything that does not make up the signal. The materials adds distortion to the signal even though it is below the loudness of the signal coming from the subwoofer or speaker driver.
I assume you referring to this:It is from the Linkwitz Transform spreadsheet from Linkwitz site.
http://www.linkwitzlab.com/images/graphics/air-distortn.gif
To requote you:
There is a fundamental misunderstanding here that you happen to be cursed by. His equations are for finding the distortion of the COMPLIANCE of the internal air volume (as if we didn't already know that when you compress a gas spring, it pushes harder), NOT the THD. Good going.Also there is distortions cause by the trapped sound waves created on the rear of the woofer inside a box. To calculate the distortion for the box use the following.
0.014*Sd*Xmax/Vb = THD %
For context, you are referring to my question "Which one of my points are you referring to?".Hard to say because you just quote and bicker even though they are just opinions.
Just another piece of evidence that shows you're talking out of your ass.
Those are valid equations (did not confirm personally), but more importantly, the equations that I have directly show the factors of efficiency. The equations you have, though equivalent, do not tell you immediately what will change the efficiency. For example, looking at my 2nd equation:Sure you can use that formula, but it will not be near as accurate as the more reputable equations. They are the following.
n0 = 9.64*10^(-10)*Fs^3*Vas/Qes
SPL = 112 + 10*LOG(n0)
These are posted at the following.
http://www.diysubwoofers.org/sld/sealed3.htm
They are also in other books that have those equations, but mainly it is in Ray Alden. If you have a problem with it, complain to Ray Alden.
n0 = rho*(Sd*BL)^2/(Mms^2*2pi*c*Re);
You can immediately see that by efficiency is proportional to the square of radiating surface area and to the square of the force-current ratio (B*L), and inversely proportional to the square of the moving mass and inversely linearly proportional to the DC resistance of the voice coil.
Therefore, by increasing the Sd can generally increase efficiency as surface area tends to grow faster than the mass, considering the entire mechanical assembly.
Sorry to hear that.Hard to explain in a short time frame. I do not have time write up to prove that I am right.
Really? The Sd decreases because the cone gets smaller? Interesting effect.I already know compression. Compression is caused by the air pressure being greater than the energy of the materials used in the cone. At this point the Sd decreases because the cone is deforming.
By the way, you'll note that I said "power compression":
Which has nothing to do with any mechanical deformation - rather, it is the reduction in speaker output due to the increase in impedance of the driver. The impedance increases because of the rise in temperature in the voice coil due to Joule heating when high amounts of power are sent to the driver. This effect is very commonly noticeable in pro audio applications when high amounts of power are used on a regular basis, and ONLY in voltage-drive systems (i.e. where the damping factor is high). As the damping factor decreases, as is the case for most vacuum amplifiers, voltage drive tends towards current drive and instead of maintaining a proportional output voltage, the amp maintains a proportional output current (which tends to increase the power delivered to a hotter coil, which is the opposite). P = I^2R, for constant current and rising R, P increases, while for voltage drive P = V^2/R, where for constant voltage and rising R, P decreases.Howard said:And, as reducing Sd tends to decrease efficiency, the higher power required increases power compression (linear distortion rather than non-linear distortion)
If you don't believe me, first of all you need to do research, and second of all you need to do more research. JBL has many white papers on power compression, I believe.
What I did was get the best for jlee that I could given his budget and space constraints. if you don't like the fact that I prefer to utilize the maximum amount of Xmax possible given all other factors (and it is a manufacturer-supplied Xmax generally rated at 70% of neutral BL), tough shit. By the way, with 300W in my design (as I specified), I don't even get close to using up all of the Xmax until some stupidly low frequency. I think it's around 15Hz but I can't be sure, don't have the program here.You are only going to make it worst for your self by designing something to linear limits. If you doing any business, your customers will come back and in force you to fix the subwoofer. If you provide head room, customers will come back for more good business.
Did you just conveniently ignore the fact that I said gain can be user-restricted? And do you know that gain is different from volume control? That it can be set with fixed resistors?Can not count for everything in design like a subwoofer. Telling anybody to be careful the volume control is not advice. Anybody will happily turn it to max. Any engineer does count the maximum volume and a little bit above the max.
Yes, when a driver is put into an enclosure, the maximum power can change, but it is NEVER higher than in free-air unless there is something in the enclosure that sucks heat away. Why? Let's break "wattage limit" into its various parts:All woofers wattage limit is stated in free air or no box. When the woofer is put into a box, the wattage limit changes. It can be lower or higher.
1) Thermal power handling - this is the wattage limit for the voice coil and is basically how much power you can send without melting anything
2) Mechanical excursion limits - this is the point at which the moving assembly hits the motor on the inward stroke, and the amount of power required for this to happen depends on the frequency of the signal and the enclosure tuning
3) Distortion limits - this is the wattage limit that is determined by the acceptable amount of distortion, but is not generally considered as a "hard limit"
Case number 1 is the dominant case except where case 2 exists; therefore, if Xmech (mechanical xmax) is not being achieved, the driver's power limit is that which will not cause the glues to melt, or the plastic voice coil former to deform, or the magnet wire insulation to burn off, or whatever. Now, putting the driver into an enclosure will generally reduce its excursion for any given wattage, but since in many cases the driver is thermally limited (everywhere in the passband except low bass, depending on tuning), the enclosure will NOT help suck out heat and will actually serve to insulate the driver.
What kind of designer are you? As a designer, your top priority should be to meet your customer's requests, or to work with your customer to find out what he wants. Why the fuck should he care how much wattage the system can handle? The customer generally has SPL, frequency response, specific polar radiation, size, weight, budget, etc. as requirements but when the hell does anybody specifically ask for 1000W (as an example)? Fucking stupid.It is best to set a desire goal for the wattage handling and then come up with a design that suits that goal.
Did you not realize that jlee specified several constraints such as budget, size, intended purpose etc. but specifically DID NOT care about the wattage of the system? If I give him more wattage than you do, do you think he cares?
Let me ask you this - even if bracing reduces the flex of the walls, why do it in the first place? There is no way a well-made plain box will break apart even from stupid amounts of displacement, so why? And bracing doesn't control vibration in and of itself. It might make the walls flex less, but the box as a whole will still experience the same reaction forces from the driver.I will say you are confused and contradicting your self. Bracing does not make it sound better and not any more than using $1000 for speaker cable. Bracing just provides strength to the walls, so they do not flex. Sure bracing can help control the vibrations, so they are minimal.
Now let me tell you something - the flex of the walls is considered to be, by many reputable people, AUDIBLE.
Good fucking riddance. One warning sign we should've all noticed was that you claim to be a designer, but yet don't want to reveal yourself. Either you're a really shitty designer, or you aren't a designer at all.I am done speaking to you because you do not how to quit. You can post your improbable corrections, but I am not going to post back.
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