Is "prat" not a good thing anymore?
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- 47 posts total
For example, if i want a certain high sensitivity 3 way speaker connected to a sub and make it very PRATty, this is all the stuff i had to do...took a fair amount of measuring and listening to get there (some notes i took)...
Mating the bass driver and sub 18db/oct butterworth 80 hz high pass for the bass driver 48 db/oct butterworth 100 hz low pass Delay bass driver by 0.56 ms low --> mid 250hz low pass 250 hz high pass Drop mid driver level by 6db
mid ---> high 1700hz low pass 1900 high pass
Do you think you can achieve such precision, fine tune things passively somehow? (not electronically)...with some air core inductors, caps, crap and what not? Alas, you can’t. Oh, you got very high quality caps and drivers or what not? did that help too much? it didn’t... I need to get to a certain delay/offset...if i have to do it passively, now, there will be some geometric changes made to the cabinet, where the driver’s mounted, physcial offsets, or other design features, etc, which can in turn mess up other things...So, it is always a compromise. In summary, many purist guys shall suffer through some PRATless speakers....High quality drivers and passive components and a glossy cabinet finish meant nothing if you still can’t execute it...If you want to play it to the bone, there are some fairly accurate parameters that can get him there for some drivers and a cabinet, but.....when he’s pure, he won’t have much speaker PRAT.... He has to rely on a high quality speaker designer and manufacturer for some high quality drivers, nevertheless. It’s mostly the speakers that killed it for y’all....and room acoustics The other electronics are not that big a deal (amps, dacs, etc).....any fairly competent manufacturer can get you there...the rest is up to the musician, whether he made some PRATty music, to begin with or not.... Hence, It can also be a guy’s poor taste in music and PRATless musicians that can kill the PRAT for him. Diana Krall and Norah Jones are such boring PRAT killers... no PRAT for you from Diana...
@simonmoon wrote
@avanti1960 wrote
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There's a lot that needs to get right for good timing. First speaker polarity, check it with at test track like Phase Test by Bunker Analog. The driver alignment and crossover of speakers introduce timing errors that you are stuck with and kill timing. With anything digital the filter (s) are what kill timing, typically they use either linear (phase) filters which generate pre-ringing that is really confusing to the perception of harmonics or minimum phase filters that cause frequency dependent phase shifts like speakers (slightly less confusing). If sound arrives with the frequency's out of phase its a bothersome timing smear, a pre-ring is a nasty time smear. When the timing is right it triggers a subconscious relaxation of the mind as it can enjoy the music vs dealing with interpreting confusing un-natural sound properties. |
- 47 posts total

