Cerwin-Vega stroker Pro 15 User Manual

Page 3

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shelf’s 10 1/4” diameter except for the six 1/2”-

diameter mounting posts that it suspends from.

This gives substantial venting area for the airflow

generated by the lower spider motion to move air

past the exposed voice coil and top plate. For the

air caught between the two spiders, there are an

additional six 1/4” x 2” vents. At the back side of the

motor you have a series of six 3/32” diameter

peripheral vents that move air from between the

pole piece and the voice coil out the back of the T-

yoke. Lastly, an aluminum-sleeved 1 3/4” diameter

pole vent powered by the large, moving clear plas-

tic dustcap supports the third spider at the top of

the woofer. Because of this, the sleeve extends to

about double the height of the pole, and thus acts

as another heatsink.

The real heart is the MMAG motor structure.

Since the voice coil is shorter than the combined

length of the two gaps, it appears similar to a con-

ventional underhung voice coil motor. In the con-

ventional motor, as the short coil rides out of a sin-

gle large gap in either direction, the total number of

voice coil turns in the gap decreases and so does

the total Bl, or total horsepower, of the motor.

However with the Stroker Pro dual-gap motor, the

situation is more like hav-

ing two gaps working in

unison. As the number of

turns starts decreasing in

one gap, the number of

turns in the other gap

increases so that the num-

ber of voice coil turns of

wire in the gap stays con-

stant. The cool part is that

it operates in a way that

the two gaps are always

working in conjunction

with each other such that

the number of turns does

not begin decreasing until

the voice coil starts to

leave just one gap. (See

sidebar on pg. 73 for more

information on dual-gap

technology.)

Other features for the Stroker Pro motor include

a forged and CNC-milled single piece T-yoke that

includes an extended pole piece with a pole vent.

This vent gives access to a patented adjustable spi-

der bias system for the top or third spider. All the

original Stroker woofers

had this adjustment sys-

tem; however, it was set

at the factory for maxi-

mum linearity. Stroker

owners found that tweak-

ing this setting enabled

the woofers to play even

louder. Biasing a spider

toward the front side and

causing the voice coil to

be deliberately off-cen-

tered toward the front of

the gap area creates high-

er amounts of even-

ordered distortion (2nd

and 4th harmonics to be

exact). Besides the warm

tones caused by the

biased spider, the

increased even-order distortion also increases the

bass due to a psycho-acoustic phenomenon called

the missing fundamental (which produces percep-

tion of low bass from notes an octave higher). So, if

you want to go from very clean linear bass to an

altered warm bass sound quality, Stroker Pro

woofers come with a tool that allows the user to do

that.

One of the key features to good subwoofer per-

formance is a solidly stiff cone, and the cone in the

Stroker is about as stiff as it gets. Built from layered

carbon graphite and thick paper, the cone is further

reinforced by the large 7 1/2”-diameter clear poly-

carbonate dustcap. Long excursion in a subwoofer

requires the suspension to move long distances.

One solution is incorporating a wide surround that

allows the cone to move further. However, this

decreases the cone area, which in turn requires the

cone to move further! Cerwin-Vega’s patent-pend-

ing solution is SdMaxx (Sd is an engineering abbre-

viation for the area of a cone). Rather than being

low and wide, the polyether foam surround is more

of an ellipsoid shape, tall and narrower. The result is

the same excursion ability, but a greater cone diam-

eter and area. The other part of the SdMaxx system

is an attachment design that allows the entire cone

Figure 1

Figure 2

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