I have done this multiple times, and PCD comes very close and i am able to track the woofer + tweeter FR reponse with the Tweeter and Woofer individual response in PCD. But this reading has me stumped, i am trying all sorts of distances, but nothing seems to work. The responses are not even coming closer.
The speaker is a small 2 way bookshelf, woofer below tweeter, all measurements on tweeter axis. The reading are as follows:
- Tweeter response after finding the min phase in response modeler
- Woofer response after finding the min phase in response modeler
- Tweeter + Woofer response after finding the min phase in response modeler
The tweeter + woofer response was loaded as the overlay. The tweeter and woofer response and zma loaded.
The mic distance was 36 inches, hence entered as 0.941 meters
the tweeter to woofer ctc is 5.5 inches
Comments
You may need more on the z axis. While rare, it can be much more. On the reclamation design I did using the rs28a and w6520r, my z axis was -.043. Checked and rechecked multiple times. That's just where it was.
I will try a larger value for the z axis - the drivers are CSS LD22C and SB15NRXC30-4
As a time saving measure, the impedance isn't necessary to determine relative acoustic offset.
First thing I check is flipping polarity of the tweeter the to see if something got switched accidentally.
On Bill's coax I spent a bunch of time playing with the tails in the Blender which did make a difference
Ed, what should be the correct type of peak? I am attaching a screenshot of the "Data Analysis" Tab.
John, I though that might be the issues after seeing the null, and measured twice after it and went through the steps, but no change.
I'll try without the impulse response, and no min phase correction.
Kenny, the T+W contains the acoustic center offset. The T or the W doesn't. Hence trying to match the summed response in PCD of the Tweeter and Woofer to the T+W FR helps to deduce the AC.
Decibel, there no XO component, but i seem to still get a tail on the woofer. I did reset PCD (re-initialize Program Session (including FRD and ZMA button towards the bottom), is there any other way of clearing out PCD?
You could always try to replicate the result in WinPCD instead.
Dan
The FRD files are in this link, this is the raw response from Holm, before taking the min phase.
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1eSHLQeYtAwfLB1L_PIf2p_Nr5v3oavRl
1. I use the "Largest Peak (positive/negative)" setting in Holm and check the impulse plots to verify both speaker peaks are positive (i.e. same polarity).
2. I use the same gate setting, just before the first reflection, for all three measurements.
Gating out reflections isn't strictly necessary for determining acoustic offset, in fact I use a long gate to keep a higher measurement resolution. It is important that everything (gate, distance, level, etc) remains the same for all three measurements.
I don't buy that. Maybe if you use reflected junk in both the individual measurements and the T + M measurement. But then you'll need to measure again as you could not trust the reflected junk individual measurements.
The only resolution you are improving is below say 400 hz.which is easily blended in.
I had a huge gating issue screw up my RS180P project a few years back. Opening the gate up invited junk/ dips into the higher frequencies.
For design purpose I'd be retaking the measurements anyway, as I'd want my woofer response to be an on-axis measurement, not on the tweeter axis.
As for "resolution". the gate dictates the resolution of the measurement. When you set a gate of 4ms, 250Hz is the gate freq but is also your resolution for the first octave. Resolution doubles every octave above the gate frequency.
I could be wrong, I haven't gone through this process in some time, with SoundEasy I simply measure each driver on axis, and the acoustic offset can be measured from the impulse response since it includes time of flight information. FWIW you could probably do the same with REW or Holm or ARTA, but have to ditch the USB mic for a 2 channel setup.
I've successfully built a handful of speakers, so I'm confident that whatever I'm doing is working
SoundEasy does this correctly in my mind. I take a driver on-axis response, and move the driver along the y-axis relative to the mic, and the response changes accordingly since the driver is both further from the mic and off-axis.
Example, top to bottom the driver is moved further from the mic, along the y-axis.
I have Soundesy but my laptop is too old to use it. Guess it's time to upgrade.
Xsim does not sim off axis as PCD does. Separate measurements are needed.
But i still haven't taken the plunge, still doing/learning the old fashioned way.... though i am guilty of taking the active shortcut from time to time....
Thanks for all the help, the FRs are now directly taken from Holm Impulse after setting it to Largest Peak (Positive / Negative). This is what it looks like... The System response is vitually indistinguishable from the Overlay. The Z also turned out to be quite large at 0.067.