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DIY For Audio
How to choose speaker drivers?
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<blockquote data-quote="Ingvar Ahlberg" data-source="post: 765407" data-attributes="member: 15447"><p>Disagree as much as You want, this is still a fact.</p><p>I have been a speakermanufacturer for a bit more than 45 years and am fully aware of the evolution of drivers, often devolution, everything made worse but cheaper, still, no x-over works as intended without an impedance corecting network on the lf driver, <u>Fact.</u></p><p></p><p>But i do agree that the perfect way to go is "fullrange" for project at hand, multichannel is nothing i?m intersted in as i?ve only got two ears but properly used fullrange drivers allways plays music in a credible and enjoyable way, how they work in this application i don?t know but probably very good.</p><p></p><p>Manufacturer mentioned by thread starter, Visaton, has quite a lot of interseting and rather nicely priced fullrange units, so maybee the best way to go.</p><p></p><p>Ingvar</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ingvar Ahlberg, post: 765407, member: 15447"] Disagree as much as You want, this is still a fact. I have been a speakermanufacturer for a bit more than 45 years and am fully aware of the evolution of drivers, often devolution, everything made worse but cheaper, still, no x-over works as intended without an impedance corecting network on the lf driver, [u]Fact.[/u] But i do agree that the perfect way to go is "fullrange" for project at hand, multichannel is nothing i?m intersted in as i?ve only got two ears but properly used fullrange drivers allways plays music in a credible and enjoyable way, how they work in this application i don?t know but probably very good. Manufacturer mentioned by thread starter, Visaton, has quite a lot of interseting and rather nicely priced fullrange units, so maybee the best way to go. Ingvar [/QUOTE]
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DIY & Tutorials
DIY For Audio
How to choose speaker drivers?
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