Avalon Acoustics Sentinel User Manual

Page 60

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60

Loudspeaker Measurements

Returning to loudspeakers, a similar situation has developed. Although

nobody listens to music in an anechoic chamber, loudspeaker measurements
are commonly performed in them.

3

Although various proposals have been

made for performing low frequency measurements in a more realistic setting,

there has been no agreement as to what that setting should be.

Loudspeakers continue to be measured in a test chamber that is equivalent

to the absence of any room at all.

There is a developing appreciation that this traditionally performed

measurement is not an accurate predictor of the performance actually

attained in the listener's room. Certainly, in-room frequency response is more

important than anechoic response in determining a speaker's tonal

accuracy. Placement of the speaker within a room will cause changes in the
frequency response compared to the anechoic condition.

4

At lower

frequencies, the speaker's output is modified by the acoustic loading

presented by the walls and floor. However, when making measurements, it is

difficult to separate the effects of a room's bass reinforcement from standing

waves and other resonances associated with that room.

3

Since an anechoic chamber which performs accurately to low frequencies is

extremely large and expensive, other measurement methods are also commonly

used. These include near-field measurements, when the microphone is extremely

close to the driver, and half-space measurements, when the speaker under test is

buried with its front baffle flush with the ground, facing upwards. Both of these

methods are equivalent to anechoic measurements below the frequency at

which the speaker baffle appreciably changes the acoustic load to the woofer,

typically between 100 and 200 Hz. Note that these conditions are also

non-representative of an actual listening situation.

4

Since this discussion is concerned with the reproduction of low frequencies, we

will not delve deeply into the high-frequency variations between the anechoic

response and the in-room response of a loudspeaker. Briefly, the interaction of

the dispersion pattern of the speaker with the reflective surfaces in the room (and

the variation of both with frequency) creates an in-room frequency response that

may vary markedly from the anechoic response.

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