Avalon Acoustics Sentinel User Manual

Page 61

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61

Designing for Accurate Bass Reproduction

How, then, does one arrive at the goal of a loudspeaker that provides tonal

accuracy in the listening room? The answer, in large part, comes in the form

of the digital computer. It is possible to create a mathematical model of a

listening room, and predict the response of a given speaker in that room. With

the computer model, it is quite easy to change the position of the speaker in

the room, or other parameters of the model. In this way, a composite picture

can be created of a wide variety of rooms and speaker locations. This

enables one to design the speaker so that it interfaces properly with the

listening environment and provides correct bass response in real-world

environments.

The accuracy of the computer model must also be tested in the physical

world, using pink noise, warble tones, and time-delay spectrometry for

verification. The final, and most important check, is the listening test. Theory

and measurements become useless if they do not agree with what our ears

tell us. Even the best measurement methods provide little more than a

simplified, one-dimensional translation of what is, in reality, an extremely

complex, multi-dimensional experience. Again, the goal is the recreation of a

musical event, and the faithfulness of that recreation can only be determined

through listening.

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