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| Home Audio Subwoofers Measuring PR/ported subwoofers outdoorsDiscuss Measuring PR/ported subwoofers outdoors in the Manufactured Speakers and Subwoofers forum; Measuring PR/ported subwoofers outdoors As mentioned in this post: http://www.hometheatershack.com/foru...tml#post154701 , when measuring a subwoofer (like, outdoors, not in a room), do you not ... |
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| Measuring PR/ported subwoofers outdoors As mentioned in this post: http://www.hometheatershack.com/foru...tml#post154701 , when measuring a subwoofer (like, outdoors, not in a room), do you not need to take into account everything that emits sound? That includes the driver itself, the PR(s)/the port. Otherwise you wouldn't get a realistic response, no? | ||||
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| Re: Measuring PR/ported subwoofers outdoors I think it depends on the configuration of the driver. I would imagine that a single measurement nearfield would be taken of the driver, a single taken of the port, a single taken of the combined, then an overlay of the two independent measurement (driver and port) that would use to compare the two(singles then combined). That's the way I would try it anyway. | ||||
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| Re: Measuring PR/ported subwoofers outdoors Quote:
However, at, say, 20Hz, the wavelength is 56ft, meaning most practical direct radiators and resonators in "small" boxes are largely omnidirectional, humongous horns notwithstanding. Which--and totally guessing here--a 3ft baffle might yet have a couple dB worth of "shading" ability at those wavelengths. Not night and day, but still, if you're trying to measure what you've paid for... | |||||
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