GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Ask Me" Archives

...to June 16, 2008

 

Loud-playing speakers

June 16, 2008

I need a pair of speakers for a large game room that I have recently finished in my basement. Although it has a fitness room attached to it too, it is mainly for home theater and gaming and I want a pair of speakers that will play loud and clean. What would be your best suggestion?

Dan

There are two speakers you should consider. The first is the Axiom M80 v.2. What Axiom has basically done with that speaker is double-up the drivers from top to bottom. This not only increases the speaker’s ability to play loud, but also increases its ability to handle lots of power and play with lower distortion. It might be just what you’re looking for. The other suggestion is to look at one of the horn-loaded models from Klipsch, like the RF-63. Horns will typically play louder than conventional speakers because they are much more sensitive -- meaning they will play louder with less power. I think between the Klipsch horns and the Axiom M80 v2s, you’ll find exactly the right speaker for your new room.


Omnidirectional bass?

June 10, 2008

Thank you for your answer on front-ported speakers. That was very helpful. As a follow-up question, can you tell me at what frequency bass becomes omnidirectional?

Paul Brookstone

Bass becomes omnidirectional somewhere around 80Hz. This is why that frequency is often specified as a good starting point for crossing over a subwoofer to your main speakers. If a subwoofer has a low-pass crossover of 80Hz it is generally accepted that it can be placed away from the mains because the sound emanating from it cannot be tied to the physical subwoofer location. While this does not always work perfectly in reality, it is a good rule of thumb for beginning the process of integrating a subwoofer into a system.


Front-ported speakers

June 6, 2008

Is it true that a front-ported speaker will interact less with the wall behind it? Specifically I’m thinking about a bookshelf design that will actually fit in a bookshelf.

Paul Brookstone

As a general rule of thumb, yes it is true. Even though low frequencies are essentially omnidirectional, meaning that any speaker’s bass will interact to some degree with the boundaries around it, a rear-ported speaker is more prone to this than others. The reason is simple: The port extends the bass response of the speaker by utilizing the resonant frequency of the enclosure and the rear wave of the woofer. This means that the port is an active contributor to the sound you hear almost like another driver itself. Having a rear-mounted port effectively places a source of sound nearer a boundary than if it was a front-ported design by the depth of the cabinet (example: if the speaker is 15” deep and a front-ported design it would effectively have a source of sound 15” further from the boundary than the same speaker with a rear-mounted port). That means more boundary reinforcement as a result with the rear-ported speaker, and therefore more interaction with that bookshelf.


“Thanks”

June 4, 2008

Thanks for the Usher Audio S-520 loudspeaker review. These sound like exactly like what I have been looking for, and I can swing the price. Looking at Usher's website, I’m amazed that you can get such colors as yellow and red. Those options are usually only seen in more expensive speakers. At least the ones I’ve seen. Keep up the great work.

Pat


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