
jonnythan
Audioholic Ninja
jneutron, I thin it's time for you to show us some numbers or shut up.
Ok, it doesn't. Are you happy now? I just gave you all the equations that say so in post 431. Or are you just too stupid to understand them?Show that the tweeter filter power has ANYTHING to do with the woofer impedance in a biwire config..
And by the way it only depends on what viewpoint you take. If you write the equations in terms of current, then yes the tweeter filter power is depended on the woofer impedance.Show that the tweeter filter power has ANYTHING to do with the woofer impedance in a biwire config..Anything..
You are right. I apologize to the readers of the forum for dragging out this discussion as long as I have.This is what you guys look like to the rest of us:
I'm sure Seagate is happy about this discussion because now Gene has to buy more disksYou are right. I apologize to the readers of the forum for dragging out this discussion as long as I have.
You have not been watching two engineers do battle. You have been watching one engineer. The other "party" (me) has used all the "yaysayer" tricks and methods he can think of to trip the engineer up....It's fun to watch engineers do battle. They spill numbers, not blood.![]()
It's supposed to emphasize how correct I am..and how wrong everybody else is..oh, don't forget color...very important as well. Combining both with bold and italics really means business.Big bold letters mean there must be some sense of urgency, has bi-wiring become that important?![]()
Don't be. I'm sure many people got a good taste of what actual engineering is all about. You've been a fun "opponent".You are right. I apologize to the readers of the forum for dragging out this discussion as long as I have.
It depends on the thread I guess.as we all know the audio field is filled with dubious claims that are often used to justify equipment costing unbelievable amounts of money (not claiming jneutron has any commercial motives, but his claims could easily be abused by persons who do). For someone who (thinks he is) in a position to provide a counter-argument to one such claim, what do you feel the correct response should be: do nothing and walk away shaking ones head hoping not to give the claimant more attention then he or she deserves? Or engage in the discussion and try to expose the bogus claim, but risk getting bogged down in threads like this? Personally I haven't yet found a satisfying answer to this question and occasionally allow myself to get dragged into conversations like these.
I'm sure they were useful to many..In fact, this brainstorming session (or silly diatribe) helped me figure out where my positive result may have come from..I do hope some of my posts were of some use to at least someone somewhere out there![]()
I think Gene has fallen behind in that regard. It seems that stored in my attachment folder is about a meg and a half more of files than we are allowed. I'm faced with having to delete many of my attachments in order to post any new pictures or schematics..I'm sure Seagate is happy about this discussion because now Gene has to buy more disks![]()
Uhm.....I'll do better than tat. I'll give you a generic solution for either schematic. With the equations I'm going to derive for you, you can calculate all powers in either circuit. So we will hopefully end this sillyness once and for all. And if you object then show us YOUR equations and stop blabbering!
Let us suppose a circuit "halfway in between" the mono and bi-wire cases. One set of wires leaving the amp. Halfway they split into 2 sets of wires one going to the tweeter, one to the woofer. Say:
Rw1 = wires from the amp to the "in between" node
Rw2 = wires from "in between" node to the tweeter
Rw3 = wires from "in between" node to the woofer
The bi-wired case can then be considered as Rw1 = 0 and conversely the mono wire case can be considered Rw2 and Rw3 = 0. So the resulting set of equations will apply to both. We will also consider voltage drive and all expressions will be done in terms of voltage only (just so you can remove the woofer branch without breaking the equations on an infinity).
So:
Pamp = Pw1 + Pw2 + Pw3 + Pfil-tw + Pfil-wf + Ptw + Pwf
With:
Pamp: power put out by the amp
Pw1, Pw2, Pw3: the wire losses
Pfil-tw: power term of the tweeter filter
Pfil-wf: power term of the woofer filter
Ptw: power term of the tweeter
Pwf: power term of the woofer
Al being functions of time (not talking about average power here).
From this we can say:
Pspeakers = Ptw + Pwf = Pamp - (Pw1 + Pw2 + Pw3 + Pfil-tw + Pfil-wf)
What we want to prove here is that there is no distortion in the speakers and hence the power in the speakers must be given by an expression that looks like this:
Pspeakers = K1*sqr(Va) + K2*sqr(Vb)
With K1 and K2 constants that must be independent of time and independent of either Va or Vb. Va is the HF signal and Vb is the LF signal. Both functions of time (although their exact shape doesn't matter, only that one is pure LF and the other pure HF).
Good, let's start:
Pamp = (Va + Vb)*(Ia + Ib)
Using the fact that the filters have either zero or infinite impendance for each signal, we can calculate the resistance seen by the LF and HF signals:
Let us call:
Ra = Rw1 + Rw2 + Rtw -> HF resistance
Rb = Rw1 + Rw3 + Rwf -> LF resistance
Then
Ia = Va / Ra -> HF current
Ib = Vb / Rb -> LF current
Or:
Pamp = (Va + Vb) * ( Va / Ra + Vb / Rb )
Pamp = sqr(Va) / Ra + sqr(Vb) / Rb + Va*Vb*(1/Ra + 1/Rb)
Pamp = sqr(Va) / Ra + sqr(Vb) / Rb + Va*Vb*(Ra+Rb)/(Ra*Rb) [equation 1]
Next, the power in the wires:
Pw1 = Rw1 * sqr(Iw1) = Rw1 * sqr(Ia + Ib) = Rw1 * sqr(Va / Ra + Vb / Rb)
Pw1 = Rw1 * sqr(Va/Ra) + Rw1 * sqr(Vb/Rb) + 2*Rw1*Va*Vb/(Ra*Rb) [equation 2]
The power in the other wires is trivial and:
Pw2 = Rw2 * sqr(Ia) = Rw2 * sqr(Va/Ra) [equation 3]
Pw3 = Rw3 * sqr(Ib) = Rw3 * sqr(Vb/Rb) [equation 4]
The power in the filters can be found:
Pfil-tw = Vfil-tw * Ifil-tw
Since the HF filter cannot drop an HF voltage (it's impedance is 0) it must drop all of the LF voltage (b) remaining at the end of the wires:
Vfil-tw = Vb - Vbw1 - Vbw2 - Vbtw
Note that since the HF filter cannot pass the LF current, wire 2 cannot be carrying any LF current so cannot drop any LF voltage either. Same for the tweeter. Hence Vbw2 = 0 and Vbtw = 0.
Vfil-tw = Vb - Ib*Rw1 - 0 - 0
Vfil-tw = Vb - Ib*Rw1
Vfil-tw = Vb - (Vb/Rb)*Rw1
Vfil-tw = Vb*(1 - Rw1/Rb)
Since the filter cannot pass an LF current:
Ifil-tw = Ia = Va / Ra
So:
Pfil-tw = (Va/Ra)*Vb*(1 - Rw1)/Rb)
Pfil-tw = Va*Vb*(Ra - Rw1)/(Ra*Rb) [equation 5]
In the same way we can calculate the power term for the woofer filter:
Pfil-wf = Va*Vb*(Rb - Rw1)/(Ra*Rb) [equation 6]
We are now in a position to calculate:
Pspeakers = Ptw + Pwf = Pamp - (Pw1 + Pw2 + Pw3 + Pfil-tw + Pfil-wf)
By combining equations 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 :
We will do this in 3 steps:
1) gather all the terms of sqr(Va):
k1 = 1/Ra - (Rw1 + Rw2)/sqr(Ra)
2) gather all the terms in sqr(Vb):
k2 = 1/Rb - (Rw1 + Rw3)/sqr(Rb)
3) gather all the terms in Va*Vb:
k3 = (Ra+Rb)/(Ra*Rb) - 2*Rw1/(Ra*Rb) - (Ra - Rw1)/(Ra*Rb) - (Rb - Rw1)/(Ra*Rb)
k3 = (Ra + Rb - 2*Rw1 - Ra + Rw1 - Rb + Rw1)/(Ra*Rb)
k3 = 0 / (Ra*Rb)
k3 = 0
This gives us the expression for the power in the speakers:
Pspeakers = Ptw + Pwf = k1*sqr(Va) + k2*sqr(Vb)
As we can see, since k3 always works out to 0 and neither k1 nor k2 contain any dependencies on Va or Vb, the dissipation in the speakers is just a linear combination of the powers we would expect for an undistorted case.
Let's see what k1 and k2 work out to for the mono and bi-wire cases:
For mono:
Rw = Rw1
Rw2 = Rw3 = 0 so
Ra = Rw1 + Rw2 + Rtw = Rw + Rtw
Rb = Rw1 + Rw3 + Rwf = Rw + Rwf
k1 = 1/(Rw + Rtw) - Rw/sqr(Rw + Rtw)
k2 = 1/(Rw + Rwf) - Rw/sqr(Rw + Rwf)
For the bi-wire case:
Rw1 = 0
Rw2 = Rw3 = Rw so
Ra = Rw1 + Rw2 + Rtw = Rw + Rtw
Rb = Rw1 + Rw3 + Rwf = Rw + Rwf
k1 = 1/(Rw + Rtw) - Rw/sqr(Rw + Rtw)
k2 = 1/(Rw + Rwf) - Rw/sqr(Rw + Rwf)
Surprise surprise...since k1 and k2 are the same the power in the speakers is also exactly the same in both cases! Not even a difference in magnitude. If you use the same wire resistances, obviously. Otherwise there will be a difference in magnitude, but in magnitude ONLY! Nothing that cannot be fixed by turning the amp up a tad.
Note: As a simple sanity check we will put some numbers in our equations as see if they hold up:
Let's say:
Rw1 = 2 ohms
Rw2 = 4 ohms
Rw3 = 8 ohms
Rtw = 12 ohms
Rwf = 16 ohms
Va = 3 V (instanteneous value, not RMS or average or peak)
Vb = 5 V (instanteneous value, not RMS or average or peak)
Then:
Ra = 2 + 4 + 12 = 18 ohms
Rb = 2 + 8 + 16 = 26 ohms
k1 = 1/18 - (2 + 4)/sqr(18) = 0.037037
k2 = 1/26 - (2 + 8)/sqr(26) = 0.023669
Pamp = sqr(3) / 18 + sqr(5) / 26 + 3*5*(18+26)/(18*26) = 2.871 W
Pw1 = 2 * sqr(3) / sqr(18) + 2 * sqr(5) / sqr(26) + 2*2*3*5/(18*26) = 0.257 W
Pw2 = 4 * sqr(3/18) = 0.111 W
Pw3 = 8 * sqr(5/26) = 0.296 W
Pfil-tw = 3*5*(18 - 2)/(18*26) = 0.513 W
Pfil-wf = 3*5*(26 - 2)/(18*26) = 0.769 W
Pspeakers = 0.037037*sqr(3) + 0.023669*sqr(5) = 0.925 W
And indeed:
2.871 = 0.257 + 0.111 + 0.296 + 0.513 + 0.769 + 0.925
Still... lolTry following it through-it's tedious, but I find it makes sense. The notation of sqr is confusing-he should have used x^2 instead of sqr(x)...sqr generally meants square root to most people, not squared. That may ease some confusion.
The answer is "42".Uhm.....
I may speak for a few members here when I say, "Huh?"![]()
I always known that the answer is 42, what's the questionThe answer is "42".
And the wheels on the bus go 'round and 'round... 'round and 'round...![]()
Never a truer word spoken.This is what you guys look like to the rest of us...
Oh, the irony.Two engineers talking about this would be like watching grass grow.
I guess I'd rather see paint drying up, that's much more funNever a truer word spoken.
Oh, the irony.![]()
You gotta admit biwiring looks freakin' cool!![]()
Me too too ?Huh?Uhm.....
I may speak for a few members here when I say, "Huh?"![]()
Happy to give you your first thanks for this very useful postim headed that way dude!@##$%%^&&* you said "freakin cool"
U B T MaN
who said -protons-neutrons--electrons--morons :and all us other unbelievers
it is in its infancy---alchemist--right?!?! ie:strands of small wire--different morons and such attractants &&& "did i say that" i meant one of them other --rons- wordsdam the torpedoes--full speed, i mean- half volumes ahead -- xcuse my french@#$! -besides--- resistances causes fluctuations $ distortions in frequency responses---ie--noise bad--music good--mo power better-- less db loss at any volume-ie-"mo amps"-whether audible or not -another discussion--tons of head room-to shove that water down dem freakin cool wires with no fluctuations==or somepin lik dat?!?!??!!?!?
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