MartinLogan Xstat Summit X User Manual

Page 28

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L a w r e n c e , K a n s a s , U S A t e l 7 8 5 . 7 4 9 . 0 1 3 3 f a x 7 8 5 . 7 4 9 . 5 3 2 0 w w w . m a r t i n l o g a n . c o m i n f o @ m a r t i n l o g a n . c o m

©2009 MartinLogan. All rights reserved.

Rev. #121908

®

WARNING! Do not use your Summit X loudspeakers outside of the country of original sale—voltage requirements

vary by country. Improper voltage can cause damage that will be potentially expensive to repair. The Summit X is

shipped to authorized MartinLogan distributors with the correct power supply for use in the country of intended

sale. A list of authorized distributors can be accessed at www.martinlogan.com or by emailing [email protected].

Linearity . The extent to which any signal handling process

is accomplished without amplitude distortion.

Midrange . The middle frequencies where the ear is the

most sensitive.

Passive crossover . Uses no active components (transistors,

IC’s, tubes) and needs no power supply (AC, DC, battery)

to operate. The crossover in a typical loudspeaker is of the

passive variety. Passive crossovers consist of capacitors,

inductors and resistors.

Phase . The amount by which one sine wave leads or lags

a second wave of the same frequency. The difference is

described by the term phase angle. Sine waves in phase

reinforce each other; those out of phase cancel.

Pink noise . A random noise used in measurements, as it

has the same amount of energy in each octave.

Polarity . The condition of being positive or negative with

respect to some reference point or object.

RMS . Abbreviation for root mean square. The effective value

of a given waveform is its RMS value. Acoustic power is

proportional to the square of the RMS sound pressure.

Resistance . That property of a conductor by which it opposes

the flow of electric current, resulting in the generation of

heat in the conducting material, usually expressed in ohms.

Resistor . A device used in a circuit to provide resistance.

Resonance . The effect produced when the natural vibra-

tion frequency of a body is greatly amplified by reinforcing

vibrations at the same or nearly the same frequency from

another body.

Sensitivity . The volume of sound delivered for a given

electrical input.

Stator . The fixed part forming the reference for the moving

diaphragm in a planar speaker.

THD . The abbreviation for total harmonic distortion. (See

Distortion)

TIM . The abbreviation for transient intermodulation distortion.

Transducer . Any of various devices that transmit energy

from one system to another, sometimes one that converts

the energy in form. Loudspeaker transducers convert elec-

trical energy into mechanical motion.

Transient . Applies to that which lasts or stays but a short

time. A change from one steady-state condition to another.

Tweeter . A small drive unit designed to reproduce only

high frequencies.

Wavelength . The distance measured in the direction of

progression of a wave, from any given point characterized

by the same phase.

White noise . A random noise used in measurements, as it

has the same amount of energy at each frequency.

Woofer . A drive unit operating in the bass frequencies only.

Drive units in two-way systems are not true woofers but

are more accurately described as being mid/bass drivers.

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