1) There are many examples of poor OEM drivers that appear not to have been competently designed. You can't assume they are all good unless you actually measure them and confirm yourself. When you put them into a box you need to measure them again to include diffraction and acoustical interaction effects.
Absolutely no doubt about it. But this is where a cooperative community is a significant factor unlike competitive professional environment.
2) Quasi anechoic gated measurements are fine as long as you have a long time measurement window. Otherwise, you have insufficient frequency resolution, which means you cannot accurately measure and discriminate between medium- high Q resonances. This matters because the perception of a resonance is dependent on its Q-factor. We use 48--points per octave log-spaced from 10 Hz to 48k to start with. I'll let you calculate how long a time window you would need to generate that much frequency resolution using time gated measurements.
I understand the upper limit, but I don't quite follow the 10hz lower limit. I'm sure you can elaborate. As far as I can tell, drivers themselves don't normally have significant resonances this low, and box/room resonances/standing waves can be simulated, and that the the room will dominate much of the response anyways. It's my understanding that a klippel test shows most of what I need to know at these frequencies, and again the "community" aspect shouldnt be under-estimated.
So, in non-anechoic spaces you can resort to near-field measurements of the woofers and ports, try to combine and splice them with the far-field measurements (much like Stereophile does) but this is a tricky process at best. When I see these type measurements done with speakers we've tested anechoically, they often don't look the same below 150 Hz.
For sure. But again, to what extent does it matter in-room at these frequencies?
Also, if you want to measure low level amounts of distortion and conduct repeatable measurements you need a very quiet, controlled room.
Very true. Assuming of course, -70db levels of distortion are a design priority. If the distortion in a room is below the noise floor of the room it's intended to play in, I guess I jist don't follow.
3) Yes, there are affordable software tools available for network design but the simulation/model is only as good as the measurement data you put into them (see points 1 and 2).
100% agreement. But again, if the crossovers are at, say, 400hz, why did my time gate need to extend to 10hz?
4) This statement seems silly and more of an opinion than fact. But calling "professionals" stuck in their ways suggests you have a personal bias against professional loudspeaker designers.
Absolutely not. My only point is that, professional or amateur, there is still an individual aspect. So when B&W puts out another speaker with a 6.5" driver operating through its kevlar breakup crossed at 4khz to a flushmount 1" tweeter, or a DIYer does the same, I'll call them out.
As far as opinions, yes they are, but your blanket statement earlier regarding "amateurs" vs "those with tools and professional training", I too consider an opinion.
7) I'm not sure what your point here is. Without research, there wouldn't be much new knowledge or progress in audio. I agree we don't know everything there is to know about loudspeakers, room acoustics and perception, which means there are more scientific research opportunities. I'm grateful for this since I will continue to have a job until we know everything.
My only point, is strict adherance to the measurements or DBT alone can be a problem approach. You yourself have in the past have pointed out how certain design concepts have measured / performed in the past. I've seen you downplay things like ancient Tannoy Coaxials and some Martin Logan Electrostats, and in ways implied that the results are all-encompassing even though, for example a modern KEF Coaxial or BG Radia planar may not measure anything like those. And that is the point... that an adherance to past research can actually stifle progress or innovation. All research has a budget, and that itself is a problem. I don't think I need to explain that to you of all people.
I also find it hard to believe that this speaker for example,
wouldn't be improved by a cheap LCR filter on the 8" aluminum cone. But if that's what that company's testing shows.. maybe some "human" decision making isn't a bad idea. Is the extra cost really that harmful? Maybe you agree with the KEF side of things with your experiences, or maybe you don't based onyour knowledge... all I know is that a (maybe naive) human being's reaction to that graph will differ from an accountant-with-research.
I'm the last person you'll find on these boards to ever reject research, but i'm willing to criticize it where it's dated or not useful on a grand scale. I see a lot more innovation coming out of the DIY community than out of the professional community and that isn't a knock on any professional designers. They have their constraints. I would not criticize KEF for cheaping out on a notch filter, but I also feel that that's a place where an amateur, moot or not, will have their bases covered because what's $$ for 1000 units is ¢ for 2, maybe 3.
I think when you're dealing with "thresholds of audibility" the research often seems inconclusive, but generally sufficient to cut costs.
8) Neither are professionals restricted to passive crossovers. Multimedia speakers are nearly all active as are most professional speakers.
You yourself said it "Multimedia and professional speakers"... which leaves out a significant market.... the one most of us here are normally interested in. You expect me to buy that the Salon2s, for example, wouldn't likely have used three 4-ohm versions of the same 8" drivers, if the design criteria allowed for a built in amp in line each driver? I'm not making any implications here but I find it hard to believe there wouldn't have been some benefits from holistic performance perspective.
9) How do you decide what the correct sound power measurement is for a particular room?
Always start with similar sound power curves to what professionals seem to favor (increasing DI as frequency rises, don't worry about crossover nulls). That's the speaker. Once it's in the room and intended listening point, measure it. Start by dealing with boundary effects, and then focus on the ;;;;;shallow;;; frequency response rolloff or shelf above ~2.5khz subjectively. It really shouldn't take much more than a 2db/decade rolloff of axial HF response to make a pretty notable change in the sound power response.
And once you decide what that is how to you confirm that you've achieved it?
That's a good question. How do the professionals know they've acheived a fits-all power response curve that works perfectly in ;;;;;my;;; room? The answer to both is a negative as far as I can tell. DBT, SBT, SIGHTED,..... none will answer that question nor will anything else. This is the end of the line, where preference necessarily but unreliably comes in, but only to the extent where wholistic measured performance is not compromised. Even if 70% of people did prefer a bit more HF energy, does that make it more correct to the person whose home the speaker will be in? Does one rebuild the living room from scratch by the books (whatever that is) for perfect neutrality? Or is just that little bit of voicing by ear over long amounts of time actually acceptable after all for the speakers we ourselves will be listening to???
In general, "voicing" should never allow a break from design goals (iE maybe +/- 2db anechoic listening window response). ...If a well measuring speaker needs anything more than 0.5db - 1.5db axial (and thus power) response fudging, then the DIYer like the professional should reexamines the design and its shortcomings. Nothing foolproof in this world. Including a lot of speakers designed by companies WITH anechoic chambers and DBT.
Again, you can't circumvent the fact that you need to be able to make comprehensive anechoic acoustical measurements of the loudspeaker.
...yes, But you still don't need an anechoic chamber to do it. It just makes things easier.
I am absolutely sure that a competent amateur?DIY can build a well-designed loudspeaker, particularly if they have the right tools and measurements. My original comment was aimed at those who don't.
Alright, fair enough