Ashly Electronic Amplifier none User Manual

Page 29

Attention! The text in this document has been recognized automatically. To view the original document, you can use the "Original mode".

Advertising
background image

Figure 31

The summed amplitude response of

the

Ashly

18dB

per

octave

crossovers.

For

these

models,

flat

summing is achieved by setting the
dB control to 3.

Another nice feature of the state-variable filter is that once you set the
damping for a particular response, you don't need to re-adjust it for new
crossover frequencies. For example, if you own an Ashly 12dB per octave
crossover and have set the damping (dB) control to 6 for flat summing, you can

then set the crossover frequency anywhere you want and the outputs will always
sum flat. This is not true of other crossover designs.

At this point, you might ask why we don't simply tune the filter responses for
flat

summing

and

remove

the

rolloff

(dB)

control

from

the

front

panel

altogether.

After

all,

who

wants

less

than

a

perfectly

flat

response?

To

answer that question, you have to put everything back into perspective and

remember that the crossover is not goi.ng to be connected to a resistive
summing network. In the real world, you'll be hooking the crossover up to

amplifiers which will in turn be connected to speakers which will in turn be
acoustically coupled to the air and to each other. Loudspeaker reponse is not

likely to be ruler flat at the crossover frequency; instead, there will likely

be a hot spot or a deficiency in response due to the imperfect nature of the

speakers.

When

that

happens,

all

those

careful

calculations

about

flat

summing fall flat on their face. All of the sudden, you find that you need an

equalizer right at the crossover point, and with an Ashly crossover, you've
already got it. Take another look at those response curves of figures 30 S 31

above; in practive, being able to modify the damping of the filter in your
crossover is just like having an equalizer tuned precisely to your chosen
crossover frequency. The Ashly SC series crossovers give you the best of both

worlds: electrically flat summing to satisfy the lab technician, and a choice

of response shapes to help you approach acoustically flat summing where it

really counts—in a real-life loudspeaker system.

CROSSOVER EVALUATIOM

A popular and convenient method of evaluating a particular crossover is to

look at summed amplitude response, which can be accomplished by simply wiring

all the outputs of the crossover together in parallel through an appropriate

resistive network. The theory behind this sort of examination is that if you

add all the outputs together, the sum of the individual pass-bands should
equal the input signal. That is, the crossover should be capable of a flat

summed

response.

It

is

often

said,

incorrectly,

that

12dB

per

octave

23

Advertising