- Crossover Design -
One of the goals of this project was to have a speaker that
offered great sound quality, and as such, I put a little more
work into the crossover than what you would probably
fi nd in most other "music store" cabinets. I did initially
test the design with a stock passive pro-sound crossover,
which produced fair results, but I decided that a little more
effort in the crossover design could deliver dramatically
improved results.
My final passive crossover design includes a second
order low-pass fi lter plus impedance compensation
network on the woofer, which works with its natural roll-off
and eliminates higher frequency hash. The horn driver
also has a second order high-pass fi lter in addition to
an impedance notch fi lter at the resonance frequency.
Without the notch fi lter, I was getting excess excursion
and distortion at the resonance frequency. This circuit
really cleans up the sound of the high-frequency driver.
The net crossover point is about 2.5 kHz, though the
drivers are slightly underlapped, meaning that the woofer
rolls-off a little lower and the tweeter rolls-off a little
higher. Note that because of the high power levels that
this speaker will see, it is important that high wattage
resistors are used, especially in the woofer impedance
compensation leg. I chose to make a high-power resistor
pack by connecting four 20-watt resistors in parallel.
This is an excellent opportunity to mention that biamplifying
with an active 2-way crossover could be a
very viable option for these drivers. Thanks to the woofer
and tweeters' smooth frequency responses, a standard
electronic crossover should work well. Not to mention that
this approach would eliminate the crossover component
cost and the need for high-power resistors. Just center the
crossover around 2.5 kHz with about 10 dB of attenuation
on the tweeter and you should be most of the way there.
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