Clearly larger active or powered speakers or speakers with integrated powered subwoofers are best able to do it but I’m wondering more about purely passive speakers even if only in a smaller room. I realize room acoustics play a big part. I'm also wondering more about low end extension and distortion levels assuming other external factors will need adjustment for truly flat response.
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I would consider looking at the DIY site from Troels Gravesen. Lots of his kits show the speaker response and the room response, followed by the final outcome. You could find it illuminating. http://www.troelsgravesen.dk/Diy_Loudspeaker_Projects.htm Best, Erik |
Headphones! Grado made a line source array that they showed at CES one year, just for fun. It made decent bass but it had a lot of drivers in it. Seems to me it was over 6 feet tall and they won't be manufacturing it. Otherwise you're simply going to have to have a big speaker. My speakers go to 20Hz and have two 15" woofers. You probably can do it with one. The smaller the driver, the more excursion it needs and that's your limit. Bruce Thigpen got around that limitation with his subwoofer fan. Click on the link below and then products (TRW-17): http://www.eminent-tech.com/main.html From the page: A conventional speaker cones displacement must increase four times for each halving of frequency to maintain the same output. This is why conventional cone woofer companies are trying to develop “long throw” woofers. Although inefficient, cone woofers work fine above 40Hz. Below 40Hz however cone woofers quickly run out of travel and the output diminishes rapidly. |
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