This blog is going to document the building of a home theater speaker system for a good friend of mine. The goal of this project is to balance good looks, good sound, and value.
Crossover By Pete. I'll be using these for the left and right front speakers.
2 comments:
Anonymous
said...
This filter is not optimal. I made it and it was much too agressive. Remove the RC on the tweet. Remove the R on the woofer. Increase R on the tweeter from 1,5 to 5,2 ohm. Then you have a pretty good voicing. But still a little bit annoying on certain music. Something to do with too much mid... bummer eh?
Too good to leave alone. So I tweaked the front speaker xover some more. In addition to the above changes, I recommend lowering the tweet cap to around 5,6µF. You still get excellent voice definition, but with less harsh treble. These speakers give you the performance of a Ferrari for the price of a Volkswagen. What more can you ask?
2 comments:
This filter is not optimal. I made it and it was much too agressive. Remove the RC on the tweet. Remove the R on the woofer. Increase R on the tweeter from 1,5 to 5,2 ohm. Then you have a pretty good voicing. But still a little bit annoying on certain music. Something to do with too much mid... bummer eh?
Too good to leave alone. So I tweaked the front speaker xover some more. In addition to the above changes, I recommend lowering the tweet cap to around 5,6µF. You still get excellent voice definition, but with less harsh treble. These speakers give you the performance of a Ferrari for the price of a Volkswagen. What more can you ask?
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