Bif,
Don't get me wrong. Phase is taken into consideration on any competently designed speakers. My first didn't but I wasn't particularly competent then. Not yet either. Still, with four 6-1/2's per side, they sounded more dynamic than any "coherent" speakers I've heard short of the Dunlavy SCIVa. Never considered the two were related.
Time coherence implies that the first cycle of a tone is more important than the second or third. That, I'm unsure of. Really, I don't know. Low order crossovers have advantages, including transient behaviour. I like them because they're simpler and cheaper but not for all drivers and circumstances.
Here's the test... Listen to any 2.5 way speaker. By design, the woofers roll off at different frequencies and must have increasing phase separation as frequencies increase. 45 degrees by 1000 Hz is fairly typical. According to the article, where our ears are most likely to detect. The .5 woofer will be lower SPL but still audible. Can you hear any phase distortion?
Problem is that we don't hear distortion as distortion, not unless you have the trained hearing of a professional under controlled conditions. It can be measured by instruments but human brains interpret those as frequency differences and there could be any number of explanations including comb filtering, diffraction, or the driver. Almost as easily, they can be masked.
So, forget the test, it's useless. More likely that someone will misinterpret that as all 2.5's are ....
Don't get me wrong. Phase is taken into consideration on any competently designed speakers. My first didn't but I wasn't particularly competent then. Not yet either. Still, with four 6-1/2's per side, they sounded more dynamic than any "coherent" speakers I've heard short of the Dunlavy SCIVa. Never considered the two were related.
Time coherence implies that the first cycle of a tone is more important than the second or third. That, I'm unsure of. Really, I don't know. Low order crossovers have advantages, including transient behaviour. I like them because they're simpler and cheaper but not for all drivers and circumstances.
Here's the test... Listen to any 2.5 way speaker. By design, the woofers roll off at different frequencies and must have increasing phase separation as frequencies increase. 45 degrees by 1000 Hz is fairly typical. According to the article, where our ears are most likely to detect. The .5 woofer will be lower SPL but still audible. Can you hear any phase distortion?
Problem is that we don't hear distortion as distortion, not unless you have the trained hearing of a professional under controlled conditions. It can be measured by instruments but human brains interpret those as frequency differences and there could be any number of explanations including comb filtering, diffraction, or the driver. Almost as easily, they can be masked.
So, forget the test, it's useless. More likely that someone will misinterpret that as all 2.5's are ....