tigon_ridge
1000+ Head-Fier
Quote:
It would be nice if you could cite the source of your information, for I would love to learn more about BA drivers (more than what I've already learned). Otherwise, I can only guess that you may be correct. I can believe that mid-range frequencies are the easiest frequency range to produce. "Every BA driver in the industry can handle mid-range frequencies without a problem." <-- This I'm not so sure of. Every BA driver? I don't know how much different BA drivers are than dynamic drivers, but I've never heard a woofer or tweeter that handles mid-range frequencies particularly well with good dynamic range.
"it's the basic nature of the drivers" <-- What does that mean?
Originally Posted by MaoDi /img/forum/go_quote.gif I think you've mistaken, basically all balanced armature drivers don't have a problem with presenting the mid-range frequencies as it's the easiest frequency range to produce. Every BA driver in the industry can handle mid-range frequencies without a problem, so no you don't need a mid-range driver JUST to reproduce the mids. JH Audio three ways don't have a mid-range driver, it's treble, a low, and a full-range. There doesn't need to be a "mid-range" driver cause it's the basic nature of the drivers. But yes, a dedicated driver could increase the "potential" of the mid-range frequencies. |
It would be nice if you could cite the source of your information, for I would love to learn more about BA drivers (more than what I've already learned). Otherwise, I can only guess that you may be correct. I can believe that mid-range frequencies are the easiest frequency range to produce. "Every BA driver in the industry can handle mid-range frequencies without a problem." <-- This I'm not so sure of. Every BA driver? I don't know how much different BA drivers are than dynamic drivers, but I've never heard a woofer or tweeter that handles mid-range frequencies particularly well with good dynamic range.
"it's the basic nature of the drivers" <-- What does that mean?