|
|
 |
 |
 |
04-18-2003, 10:33 PM
|
#1 of 5
|
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 2000
Local Time: 08:52 PM
Local Date: 09-06-2008
Posts: 36
|
Question for you speaker design experts...
What are the benefits of adding a second driver of the same size to a speaker? Specifically, consider a small satellite speaker with a 3" mid-bass driver. What would be gained by adding a second 3" driver? (Consider the tweeter as the same in all of the scenarios below.)
SURFACE AREA: A single 3" driver has a surface area of Pi x (1.5**2) = 7.07 sq. inches. By adding a second 3" driver, the total area would be 14.14 sq. inches. More surface areas means I can now move more air. So I can play the speaker louder, right?
Comparatively, a single 4.25" driver would have a surface area of 14.19 sq. inches -- virtually the same. So with all other design elements being equal, are there any benefits of having two smaller drivers vs. a single larger one? How would their sounds differ?
POWER HANDLING: I assume that a second driver would increase the overall power handling capacity of the speaker, right?
FREQUENCY RESPONSE: No change here, I think. A second driver of identical specs adds no extension to frequency response, right?
WHAT ELSE?: What am I missing? Why else do designers add the second, same-sized driver?
THE BOTTOM LINE: Most importantly, what would any/all of the above mean in terms of sound quality? What difference would I hear? Fuller? More dynamic?
Thanks!
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
04-19-2003, 09:23 AM
|
#3 of 5
|
|
Member
Join Date: Jul 2001
Local Time: 06:52 PM
Local Date: 09-06-2008
Posts: 574
|
Your observations are essentially correct.
However, as drivers get larger, their high frequency response suffers for various reasons... cone breakup modes, narrowing polar response (beaming), cone mass, voice coil inductance, etc. It is often necessary to "double up" the woofer to achieve the desired SPL output and still "reach" up to the frequency where the tweeter can take over.
As an example, 3-4 KHz is about the upper limit for most 6" drivers. And it takes a pretty stout tweeter to pick up from there. So if the designer needs more output, his choices are to use a bigger woofer and insert a midrange, find a 6" driver with equivalent HF response and much greater linear excursion (could be expensive and may introduce unacceptable modulation distortion) or use multiple woofers. The latter is often the best choice.
Smaller drivers also allow a narrower cabinet to minimize diffraction and change baffle step compensation frequency.
As a practical matter, woofers are typically less efficient than tweeters, so double woofer arrangements solve the efficiency mismatch problem.
Finally, the popular double-woofer D'Appolito (MTM or WTW) configuration, combined with the correct crossover, provides very controlled vertical polar response to minimize room interaction.
|
|
|
 |
 |
04-21-2003, 07:58 AM
|
#5 of 5
|
|
Member
Join Date: Jul 2001
Local Time: 06:52 PM
Local Date: 09-06-2008
Posts: 574
|
Denis,
Flat frequency response and seamless integration with sub is technically possible with either 4.5" or dual-3" sattelites. However, don't expect such a setup to go real loud. To keep the sub "invisible", you must keep the crossover below 100Hz. And you just can't move enough air with 3-5" drivers to get much above 100dB at 100Hz.
I haven't heard the Pinnacle system... but as you pointed out the cone area is about the same as a single 4.5, so the performance should be similar.
What specifically are your space constraints? Could you go with in-walls?
|
|
|
| Thread Tools |
Search this Thread |
|
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is On
|
|
|
|