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A g e o f t h e P h o t o n s A u d i o
Aeternus Lux 2.2 Modular Speaker System Paul Kirby A complete listing of the design goals, realizations, and specifications of the Aeternus Lux Speaker System
Fall 13
08 Fall
2
Table of Contents
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION 4
DESIGN GOALS 5 VISUAL AESTHETICS 5 SIZE & SHAPE 6 SPL OUTPUT 7 BANDWIDTH 7 DRIVER SIZE AND SPACING 8 DIRECTIVITY 8
TECHNICAL DETAILS 10 BAFFLE STEP 10 CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS 10 DIFFRACTION AND SPEAKER SHAPE 11
DRIVER ANALYSIS & SELECTION 12 TWEETER ANALYSIS 12 TWEETER #1 DETAIL 13 TWEETER #2 DETAIL 13 TWEETER #3 DETAIL 14 TWEETER #4 DETAIL 14 TWEETER #5 DETAIL 15 WOOFER ANALYSIS 16 WOOFER #1 DETAIL 17 WOOFER #2 DETAIL 18 WOOFER #3 DETAIL 19 WOOFER #4 DETAIL 20 WOOFER #5 DETAIL 21 SUBWOOFER ANALYSIS 22 SUBWOOFER #1 DETAIL 22 SUBWOOFER #2 DETAIL 23 SUBWOOFER #3 DETAIL 24 SUBWOOFER #4 DETAIL 25 SUBWOOFER #5 DETAIL 26 DRIVER SELECTION 27 TWEETER SELECTION 27 WOOFER SELECTION 27 SUBWOOFER SELECTION 27
CROSSOVER DESIGN 28 INITIAL DESIGN 28
TESTING & TUNING 29 INITIAL PERFORMANCE AND TUNING 29 ENCLOSURE OPTIMIZATION 31
3
FINAL SYSTEM DOCUMENTATION 32 FINAL TESTING RESULTS 32 FREQUENCY RESPONSE 32 INTEGRATED RESPONSE 32 HARMONIC DISTORTION 32 MINIMUM PHASE RESPONSE 33 HORIZONTAL OFF-‐AXIS RESPONSE 33 VERTICAL OFF-‐AXIS RESPONSE 33 DIFFERENCE PLOT 34 STEP RESPONSE 34 INTEGRATED STEP RESPONSE 34 IMPULSE RESPONSE 35 WATERFALL PLOT 35 SUB RESPONSE 35 CROSS-‐OVER SCHEMATIC 36 AS-‐BUILT DRAFTING 37
BIBLIOGRAPHY 40
4
Functional Description
The first step of any good loudspeaker design process is to choose at what
point in the consumer chain you want your speakers to exist.1 I decided to make a
pseudo-‐step in the process, somewhat deriving from the 5 steps that Newell &
Holland talked about in their book. The Aeternus Lux design will be somewhere in-‐
between the mixing and consumer listening stage. My speakers will function as
reference monitors that I can sound design with, but also need to have very low
fatigue and ability to be enjoyed as simply listening loudspeakers. When sound
designing, I can be listening to something for hours on end, placing sounds for linear
media and trying numerous things out. If the monitors are too fatiguing at mid to
high SPL, it is a very unpleasant process. The system will be forward listening,2 or
listening toward the consumer end of the product and will have low fatigue at a
relatively high SPL.
For size, I want these speakers to be as universal as possible so that I won’t
end up in a living situation where they are not reasonable to use. However, I don’t
want to compromise the low-‐end response by making them small. They need to be
configurable in as many rooms as possible. Because the speakers are going to be
used for pure enjoyment as well, I would like to have a good off axis response so
they may be enjoyed from many different positions.
This system is the initial part of a future 5.1 or 7.2 surround sound system.
However, due to resources available, this initial design is only for the front left and
front right speakers. The rest of the design will be available as soon as the resources
are.
1 (Newell and Holland 2007) 2 (Moulton 2000)
5
Design Goals
Visual Aesthetics My primary visual aesthetics goal for my speaker design is to make them look
classy and versatile with a modern or contemporary décor. I was imagining a
beautiful natural wood finish face with piano black sides. Different woods I was
considering include a cherry or possibly even a birds-‐eye maple. Some examples:
Figure 1 (www.china-‐hifi-‐audio.com)
Figure 2 (www.soundgallery.co.uk)
Figure 3 ( www.designbuzz.com)
6
Size & Shape For the shape and cabinet design of my speakers I took inspiration from the
Penaudio Chara-‐Charisma line speakers. (See figure 4) In most situations I want to
have rectangular floor standing speakers with an amazing low-‐end response.
However, as said in the functional description, they need to be as universal as
possible. That’s why a modular system works the best. There will be a smaller
cabinet that houses my 2 way monitors that will then rest on top of a floor standing,
side-‐firing subwoofer with the exact same width and depth. They will then act like a
single floor standing, full range speaker but be able to be used separately as just
desk monitors with satellite subwoofers that can be moved based on the room I’m
in.
Figure 4
(Penaudio’s Chara-‐Charisma modular 3-‐way system)
7
SPL Output As far as maximum SPL output is concerned, the only stipulation I have is to
be able to mix at standardized film sound levels. The average SPL for film is 85dB
with a 20db crest factor, and an extra 10dB of headroom for the LFE’s (Low
Frequency Effects channel).3 With that condition, I would like the maximum SPL to
be about 120dB before mechanical breakdown. I would like to be able to reach
105dB without much distortion.
Bandwidth
In order to determine what low-‐end extension I want, I decided to listen to 5
different songs that I know very well on a full range system as I slowly increased a
high-‐pass filter on the songs. I noted the frequencies at which I noticed the cut-‐off,
didn’t like the cut-‐off, and absolutely hated the cut-‐off. I want to find a general
average of the point at which I didn’t like the cut-‐off and make that my 3dB point for
my low-‐end bandwidth.
The cut off frequency goal I decided upon is 65Hz for the 2way cabinet, just
about in-‐between where I noticed the cut of and didn’t like it. The cut off frequency
goal for the side firing subwoofers is 30 Hz, well below and detrimental frequency.
See the table above.
3 (Holman 2010)
Song/Artist Noticed Didn’t Like Couldn’t Stand Ed is a Portal/Akron Family 36Hz 62Hz 118Hz Danse Caribe/Andrew Bird 37Hz 64Hz 94Hz Dope Crunk/Beats Antique 35Hz 68Hz 110Hz Get Innocuous/LCD Soundsystem 42Hz 62Hz 96Hz If You Want Me to Stay/Red Hot Chili Peppers 32Hz 62Hz 110Hz Average 36.4Hz 63.6Hz 105.6Hz
8
Driver Size and Spacing To accommodate the low-‐end response wanted of the 2way cabinets I would
need decent sized woofers or mid-‐woofers. I am choosing to use 5”-‐6.5” woofers to
get the desired low-‐end response, but minimize the directionality at mid-‐
frequencies. Because the speakers are an M-‐T-‐M design, I will have to get the
woofers as close together as possible to reduce vertical lobbing. This is a design
issue that I will have to face with some creativity.
The tweeter size I plan on using will be a 1.25” dome. This will allow better
power handling at the “lower” frequencies; around the 2kHz crossover. However, I
may choose to end up with a smaller tweeter in order to get the woofer spacing as
close as possible.
The subwoofers are 10” woofers, which is the best diameter for performance
in the size of the cabinet that I will be using.
As I have said earlier, the most important thing to do is to get the woofers as
close together as possible for the MTM design to works its best. There are multiple
ways of attempting this. One way is to countersink the tweeter so that the edge of
the woofers can actually overlay on top of the tweeter. Another would be to put the
tweeter off-‐center of the array so that to two drivers could be as close as possible.
I’ve decided to do a combination of both. If I could get the two woofer centers within
8” of one another, that would give me minimal lobbing up to approx. 1000Hz.
(See Figure 5)
Directivity The directivity goal of the Aeternus Lux system is to be as widely dispersed
in the horizontal as possible at the cost of vertical lobing. The Midwoofer-‐Tweeter-‐
Midwoofer (MTM) has good horizontal dispersion, however does not perform as
well with vertical dispersion. Although that is not necessarily a bad thing, as THX
standards call for tighter vertical dispersion.
10
Technical Details
Baffle Step
The Aeternus Lux system will have a front baffle with a width of
approximately 8 inches. To determine the frequency at which my speakers will
begin to propagate into “free space,” I found the equation of 𝑓!=!,!"#!!
, Where 𝑊! is
the width of your baffle and 𝑓! is the 3dB down point when moving from halfspace
to full space in frequency.4 The 𝑓! frequency for this design will be at about 506Hz,
which will require some mid-‐high and high frequency padding to maintain a flatter
response.
Construction Materials For the construction of the speaker cabinets, I plan to use a combination of
hardwood, ¾” medium-‐density fiberboard (MDF) and ¾” ply wood. For the exterior,
the speakers will have a cherry baffle and MDF sides. The MDF allows for ease of
sanding and fine adjustments, which is very beneficial for a glossy paint finish. The
MDF is also extremely heavy and will aid greatly in mechanical grounding. The 3/4"”
ply will be used internally for bracing, added support and reduction of resonant
modes.
4 “Baffle Step Diffraction,” (Neal Jason M.) accessed January 13th, 2013 http://www.t-linespeakers.org/tech/bafflestep/index.html
Figure 5 (Effects of a baffle with a width of 18")(Neal)
11
Diffraction and Speaker Shape The Aeternus Lux system will be a rectangular cabinet, modular, floor
standing speaker system. The rectangular cabinet, as can be seen in Olson’s5 study
of cabinet shapes and diffraction results, does not have the best frequency response
out of the possible shapes. However, as far as design priorities go I am willing to
deal with the frequency variations due to the diffraction effect for ease of
construction and aesthetic quality. The speakers will have rounded edges around
the front baffle to smooth out the diffraction effect across the frequency spectrum
and not have a sudden severe phasing effect at a specific frequency.
5 Henry F. Olson, “Direct Radiator Loudspeaker Enclosures,” AES Paper, October 27th, 1950, 34.
12
Driver Analysis & Selection This section will detail the process of elimination used to choose the final
drivers implemented in the system.
Tweeter Analysis For the system at hand, I plan to use a soft dome-‐tweeter with a minimum
sensitivity of 90dBspl. The tweeter needs to have a resonant frequency of 1000Hz or
less to allow for a lower crossover point. Some of the tweeters I have picked to
analyze further are: • Jantzen JA-‐2806 1-‐1/8" Soft Dome Tweeter • Tang Band 28-‐1582S 1-‐1/8" Fabric Dome Tweeter • Morel MDT29-‐4 1” Soft Dome Tweeter • Morel ET 448 1-‐1/8" Soft Dome Tweeter • Morel MDT30S-‐4 1” Textile Dome Tweeter
Name Sensitivity Fs Power Handling (RMS) Price Jantzen JA-‐2806 91dB 700Hz 100 Watts $85.94 Tang Band 28-‐1582S 94dB 900Hz 12 Watts $109.47 Morel MDT 29 92dB 1000Hz 80 Watts $53.10 Morel ET 448 92dB 750Hz 120 Watts $117.30 Morel MDT30S 92dB 1020Hz 200 Watts $51.00 (sale)
13
Tweeter #1 Detail Jantzen JA-‐2806 I found the Jantzen JA-‐2806 to be a very prime contender as my tweeter choice. It has an incredibly low Fs, couple with its natural first order roll off due to its internally built transmission line. It is also ferrofluid cooled to maintain a high power handling. The price also resonates well with me, sitting at a reasonable $85. Some of the drawbacks include the fact that the frequency response doesn’t include an off-‐axis response, which is a major component of my design. I also didn’t like how smoothed the response is.
Tweeter #2 Detail Tang Band 28-‐15826 The tang band 28-‐15826 is a very nice tweeter. One of the things that really stood out to me is sensitivity coupled with the relatively low Fs. With 94dB sensitivity, there would be no problem get this speaker as loud as I need it to be. However, if you look at the impedance graph, the slope is rather gradual and it begins rising around the point where I want by crossover to begin. However, it has an incredibly flat frequency response but again, it doesn’t have an off axis response which is a huge component of my design.
14
Tweeter #3 Detail Morel MDT29-‐4 The Morel MDT29-‐4 has an amazing off-‐axis response, one of the first things I noticed about this tweeter. Its ferrofluid cooled and has an amazing power handling of 80 watts, giving you a safety net for overpowering. The Fs is at the highest I would really want it, but the impedance spike is rather narrow. It also has a good sensitivity of 92dB, and the price is great at $53.
Tweeter #4 Detail Morel Elite ET 448 The Morel Elite ET 448 is an amazing tweeter. The off-‐axis is again phenomenal, and the power handing capabilities of the driver is amazing. The sensitivity at 92dB is more than I need. Not only is the off-‐axis response of this driver fantastic, but it also has a very flat response. It is also ferrofluid cooled, which is one of the reasons the power handling is so amazing. Another greater feature is the small diameter of the faceplate, at only 2.83”, which works great for an MTM design. The major setback is the price, coming in at $117.30.
15
Tweeter #5 Detail Morel MDT30S-‐4 The Morel MDT30S-‐4 is another greater tweeter from morel. Again, this tweeter has an incredible off axis response. The frequency response in general is absolutely amazing. Its power handling has beaten anything else I looked at with a RMS value of 200watts. That makes me feel very comfortable with this driver, and not worried about damaging it with a clipping amp as much. The sensitivity sits the same as the rest of the Morel’s I’ve looked at, 92dB. The price is also very good, only $51, which is on sale from its normal price of $72. The major downside of this tweeter is its somewhat high Fs at 1020Hz.
16
Woofer Analysis The system at hand will be using two matched 5-‐6” mid-‐woofers per speaker.
The mid-‐woofers need to have a very low resonant frequency, good response into
the low end, and a minimum sensitivity of 85dB. They also need to perform well in a
vented box in order to get the low-‐end frequency response that I desire. Some of the
woofers I have choose to analyze further are: • Audax HM170C0 6.5" Carbon Fiber Woofer • SB Acoustics SB17NRXC35-‐4, 6.5" Woofer • ScanSpeak Discovery 15W/4434G 5.25” Midwoofer • SEAS Prestige L15RLY/P (H1141) 5.5" Aluminum Cone Woofer • Morel MW144-‐4 5" Damped Polymer Composite cone
Name Sensitivity Power Handling F3 Flat F3 Extended Price
Audax HM170C0 90dB 60 Watts 55Hz 46Hz $102.80 SB Acoustics SB17NRXC35 92dB 60 Watts 51Hz 43Hz $62.40 ScanSpeak Discovery 15W 90dB 120 Watts 92Hz 72Hz $70.70 Seas Prestige L15RLY 86dB 80 Watts 60Hz 45Hz $88.40 Morel MW144 85.5dB 150 Watts 62Hz 40Hz $115.80
17
Woofer #1 Detail Audax HM170C0 6.5” The Audax HM170C0 is an interesting driver. It has a carbon fiber Woven cone. Apparently it allows for a more dynamic bass response and helps create a natural first order roll off on the high end, making the crossover design that much easier. With a flat response bass reflex cabinet, I can get down to 55Hz with the drivers. They also have a fantastic sensitivity at 90dB. The main downside of this is the driver style (shape) and the size. A 6.5” driver will be hard to get 8” CTC (center to center) apart with an MTM design.
4th order vented box – Flat Response
4th order vented box – Extended response
18
Woofer #2 Detail SB Acoustics SB17NRXC35-‐4 I am astonished with the quality of this driver for the price that it sells for. It has an amazing frequency response and extremely high sensitivity, which is perfect for the high SPL that I want. The two downsides of this driver is the large size of the box necessary to have a flat 4th order bass reflex cabinet and the fact that it would be hard to get a really close MTM design with that large of a driver.
4th Order vented box – Flat Response
4th Order vented box – Extended Response
19
Woofer #3 Detail ScanSpeak Discovery 15W/4434G The ScanSpeak Discovery is probably one of the poorest choices for this design. However, it is a great driver for the application it’s meant for. The F3 point I got with the vented box with a flat tuned response was only 92Hz. That is not low enough to be a stand-‐alone driver. The size is perfect to get the MTM close together, but the response won’t work for the design.
4th order vented box-‐ flat response
4th order vented box – extended response
20
Woofer #4 Detail SEAS Prestige L15RLY/P (H1141) The Seas Prestige L15RLY/p is an excellent driver. The low end response for the size, 5.5”, is absolutely phenomenal. The driver also has really great frequency response. These drivers are known for their tight, clear sound, which is a very wanted trait. The breakup frequency, which is inherent in aluminum cone drivers, doesn’t happen until very far past my desired crossover range. They also come at a very reasonable price.
4th order vented box – Flat Response
4th order vented box – Extended Response
21
Woofer #5 Detail Morel MW144-‐4 The main component that stands out on the Morel MW144 is its amazing power handling capabilities. It also has a relatively tight frequency response and a pretty low F3 for the size of the driver. However, after all of this its largest and most prominent con is the cost. It’s hard to consider this as a feasible driver when you need to purchase four and have a reasonable budget.
4th order vented box – Flat Response
4th order vented box – Extended Response
22
Subwoofer Analysis
Subwoofer #1 Detail SB Acoustics SB29SWNRX-‐S75 10" Woofer Sensitivity = 86dB F3 = 25Hz dB SPL @2m = 99dB Price = $164.65
4th Order Vented Box – Extended Response
4th Order Vented Box – Flat Response
23
Subwoofer #2 Detail Dayton Audio TIT280C-‐4 10" Titanic Mk III Sensitivity = 85dB F3 = 42Hz dB SPL @ 2m = 104 Price = $155.79
4th Order Vented Box – Extended Response
4th Order Vented Box – Flat Response
24
Subwoofer #3 Detail Peerless 830668 10" Paper Cone SLS Sensitivity = 87.9dB F3 = 39Hz dB SPL @ 2m = 101dB Price = $74.14
4th Order Vented Box – Extended Response
4th Order Vented Box – Flat Response
25
Subwoofer #4 Detail Vifa NE265W-‐08 10" Subwoofer Speaker Sensitivity = 84dB F3 = 38Hz dB SPL @2m = 97dB Price = $159.00
4th Order Vented Box – Extended Response
4th Order Vented Box – Flat Response
26
Subwoofer #5 Detail Dayton Audio SD315A-‐88 12" Sensitivity = 89.6dB F3 = 45Hz dB SPL @2m = 103dB Price = $58.25
4th Order Vented Box – Extended Response
4th Order Vented Box – Flat Response
27
Driver Selection
Tweeter Selection Morel MDT30S-‐4 The Morel MDT30S-‐4 seemed to be the best choice for the Aeternus Lux
Modular System. The sensitivity is 92dB, which is more than efficient enough for the
SPL that I want. The off axis is also phenomenal, a must have for home theater and
5.1 systems. The price, which on sale is at $51.00, also sits very nicely in any budget
and will make for painless repairs in the future. The only downside to the driver is
the high Fs of 1020Hz which borders my maximum. However, this can be dealt with
by some clever crossover design.
Woofer Selection Seas Prestige L15RLY-‐P The SEAS Prestige L15RLY-‐P ended up being the best choice for the Aeternus
Lux system. The sensitivity is not that high, however it will work for the required
crest SPL. The F3 I was able to model in the 4th order vented box was at about 60Hz,
which is pretty low for the standalone speaker itself. The size of the drivers was also
a huge selling point, being that I could maintain the original goal of getting my CTC
for the two MTM woofers to be at about 8” to minimize lobing. They also sit very
nicely in any budget, at the cost of about $88.
Subwoofer Selection SB Acoustics SB29SWNRX-‐S75 10" The SB acoustics SB29SWNRX subwoofer seemed to be the ideal woofer for
the enclosure I designed for the side-‐firing subwoofers. After modeling, these
woofers gave me the lowest F3 at 25Hz, which is more than enough. This comes at
the sacrifice of a lower SPL than some of the other options, but I am willing to rely
on the equal loudness curve and cabin gain (room gain) to account for this loss in d
decibels.
28
Crossover Design
Initial Design For the crossover design, I made sure to implement a voicing that helps contribute to the low fatigue, mellow sound I desire for the Aeternus Lux system. The crossover will be third order on both ends with the F3 for the tweeter at about 3000Hz and the F3 for the woofer at 1500Hz. This will allow for a nice dip in the fatiguing frequencies. I also implemented an L-‐pad for the tweeter to match it to the woofer, and a baffle step compensation circuit for the woofer.
29
Testing & Tuning
Initial Performance and Tuning The initial sweep of the mains (the MTM modules) showed that I had boosted low end and dropped highs. There were also some issues with my baffle step compensations circuit, as it seemed to be over compensating. Some serious action needed to be taken, and I started with the woofer.
Initial Integrated response (Woofer is Red, Tweeter Yellow, Overall Purple)
Noticing the large boost at around 100Hz, the first successful measure taken was to remove the baffle step correction circuit to see if the smoothed out the response. The result is as follows:
Woofer (In Green) after the baffle step correction circuit had been removed
30
Now that the woofer was successfully tuned, I wanted to see what happened if I took the L-‐Pad off of the tweeter, as the high end was dipped quite a bit in the initial test. The results were as follows:
Tweeter without L-‐Pad
As you can see, taking the L-‐pad off evened out the frequency response until a very large boost at around 7kHz. Because the boost looked so much like a shelf, I decided to use a shelving filter to bring down that high-‐end sizzle. After much experimentation, the results were as follows:
Tweeter with high-‐shelf as compared to with out
31
The high-‐shelf helped a lot to flatten out the high end response and bring it with in approximately +/-‐ 2dB of the woofers response. However, if you notice there is quite serious wavering in the upper highs, starting at about 7kHz. After some contemplation, I realized that it seemed to be a diffraction issue, inherent with the inset tweeter and the raised edge around it. Instead of trying to sand this edge down to perfection and risk having a very strange looking baffle, it was suggested to try acoustically absorbent foam around the edge of the tweeter. After some trial and error, the results were as follows:
Tweeter with black foam surround
The foam surround help tremendously with the diffraction issues, and saved the aesthetic appeal of the final design with-‐out compromise.
Enclosure Optimization One of the goals of the Aeternus Lux system is to have a very spacious sound stage, but not blurry necessarily. Without any stuffing inside the cabinet, the sound stage is massive, however very blurred as far as specificity of imaging. After much trial and error, the final stuffing I choose to use was a small amount of blue construction foam above the brace, and cover the back wall of the speaker in pink insulation. This tightened up the special imaging until almost laser-‐like, created a beautiful phantom center, and also let the speakers breathe enough to have incredible depth.
32
Final System Documentation
Final Testing Results
Frequency Response
Integrated Response
Purple overall, Yellow Woofer, Blue Tweeter, Green Port
Harmonic Distortion
33
Minimum Phase Response
Horizontal Off-‐Axis Response
Purple 0°, Yellow 15°, Red 30°, Blue 45°, Green 60°
Vertical Off-‐Axis Response
Purple 0°, Blue 15°, Yellow 30°, Green 45°, Red 60°
40
Bibliography
• Chini Hifi Audio. www.china-‐hifi-‐audio.com (accessed January 2013). • Design Buzz. www.designbuzz.com (accessed January 2013). • Holman, Tomlinson. Sound for Film and Television. Focal Press, 2010. • Moulton, David. Total Recording. Sherman Oaks: KIQ Productions, 2000. • Neal, Jason M. Baffle Diffraction Step: An introduction. http://www.t-‐
linespeakers.org/tech/bafflestep/index.html (accessed Jan 2013). • Newell, Philip, and Keith Holland. Loudspeakers for Music Recording and
Reproduction. 1st Edition. Burlington : Focal Press, 2007. • Olson, Henrey F. "Direct Radiator Loudspeaker Enclosures." AES Paper,
October 27, 1950: 34-‐38;63-‐64. • Sound Gallery. www.soundgallery.co.uk (accessed January 2013).