h.g.
Established Member
Bracing stiffens the cabinet and pushes the frequency higher at which resonances start to occur. It does not reduce the sound pressure level of those resonances at the listening position which I suspect is what you are expecting to happen. At high frequencies a panel needs to deflect less to be equally loud as at low frequencies. To see that consider how far a large woofer has to move to be equally loud as a small tweeter. In practise they tend to be roughly the same level but we are able to perceive resonances below the signal easier at higher frequencies and so the net result is likely to be to make things slightly worse not better although not by a great amount.sploo":1zrxn847 said:I don't quite follow that? Surely if the bracing pushes the resonances high then it works just as well if the driver is in another cabinet (that's transferring energy to that cabinet) or is directly mounted in that cabinet. Obviously the energy will be higher with the driver in the cabinet, but if the cab is braced sufficiently then there should be relatively little resonance in the lower frequencies (due to the bracing).
So what you need to do to make things work well is put the woofer and midrange in separate cabinets that are isolated from each other and build those cabinets differently. The woofer cabinet needs to be stiff so that lowest resonances are in the midrange passband and will not get driven because the midrange is elsewhere. The midrange cabinet needs to be heavily damped and less stiff so that the lowest resonances are in the woofer passband and not driven and the higher order resonances that are in the midrange passband are strongly damped.
Yes I am removing resonance issues in the way outlined above and I am doing it a pragmatic way without using 2" thick mdf, excessive bracing and similar favoured by many DIY speaker enthusiasts. There are a small number of audibility studies of cabinet resonances around which show, not surprisingly, that audible levels are around 30 dB down in the same ball park as other audible grunge.sploo":1zrxn847 said:But the question surely is: if you've removed a lot of resonance issues, are the remaining resonances a genuine problem?
I ask that question because - ignoring the downright crazy audiophool stuff - there's a lot of effort in the audio world that seems to be spent on reducing problems that aren't actually detectable by the human ear (measurable doesn't mean audible).
Audiophile hardware is designed to get bought by audiophiles. If audiophiles want, for example, multiple binding posts for biwiring/biamping or whatever then speakers that do not have them are not going to get bought. It doesn't matter that biwiring/biamping or whatever isn't detectable. It doesn't matter that the manufacturers know this. A manufacturer needs to provide multiple binding posts because that is what the customer wants.
In the 1970s hi-fi enthusiasts used to give a lot of weight to small differences in completely inaudible levels of total harmonic distortion of a 1 kHz sine wave into an 8 ohm resistor when deciding which amplifier to purchase. Today audiophiles make fun of such foolish consumers but then base their purchasing decisions of DACs on small differences in jitter that are even further below audibility thresholds. In both eras the manufacturers were perfectly well aware of the irrelevance to real world performance but they are businesses giving the consumer what they want to buy.