Ambience, rumble, music or just distortion ?A couple of days ago I received an email from someone who I consider quite knowledgable in the field, and he pointed out to me that my perceived most strong bass most probably is harmonic distortion after all. Of course I refuse(d) to believe that, but it brought me the idea of "just measuring would be way more convincing than listening only". So I sat down to do just that.
Meanwhile the person told me that woofers in general easily allow for 7% of harmonic distortion.
I was shocked, but recognized that I saw some 0.1% figure somewhere when the microphone was up to some other task and that "I better not officially measure THD to begin with". Not being in denial, but merely thinking that measuring a loudspeaker this way makes no sense or is of no use. Otherwise, what to do about it when not-so-good after the the drivers have been selected (on whatever spec beyond me). It is just a given fact.
Not so (at all actually) when someone like me is tuning a speaker into its sub-low limits and that for an open baffle which would be more difficult to begin with.
So I started out with Google in order to find out specs for woofers or what they would be allowed for THD;
What did I find ? NOTHING. Ah, that was odd, but maybe just a good thing. Ok, I could find specs for woofers which tell about nice low figures, but they talk about some agreed low Wattage fed to them. Or Voltage, whatever. Useless (to me).
I found this though :
http://www.audioholics.com/loudspeaker-design/2010-subwoofer-shootout/2010-subwoofer-shootout and the main picture in there is this one :
The red line indicates an official "spec" to what subwoofers are allowed to exhibit for harmonic distortion.
Although this is about subwoofers and not really woofers as such, for me it is the thing to deal with, because aren't we talking about subwoofers ?
So, if you look at the test signal there and see it is 20Hz, the red line tells that the first harmonic (40Hz) is allowed to be at not more than -10dB. If more, then the subwoofer is no good.
N.b.: I ran into ABX tests where similarly was examined in a group of people, and the results were that nobody could hear a difference in those lower registers anyway.
In advance of how this post will end : go figure.
Anyway, a subwoofer manufacturer should produce his product in compliance to this graph, and when it does it can "officially" go out. Of course, many do better, but this is about my quest to how actually others are performing, while I scream about a couple of things and whether that is justified (audible I say Yes, but what about some figures and what will they mean to you, you too not really knowing what would be normal and what would be in excess (either direction)).
So what a speaker driver is about (amonst other things) is that it should not produce too much HD (harmonic distortion) and we know that when excursion gets higher HD will increase. Also : when the SPL to be produced gets higher, excursion will be more. And : When the frequency to produce gets lower for the same to be produced SPL, excursion gets higher. So all is related especially when we try to achieve the lowest frequencies at workable SPLs for our music.
Now first the for me foremost important thing, and I see no writing about it anywhere :
When we talk subwoofers, we talk by sort of principle of frequencies we can not hear. Of course, a subwoofer can go higher (at will of the manufacture and which for sure is the case with our Orelino here), but a subwoofer is no subwoofer when it can't produce, say, 22Hz at reasonable SPL and which 22Hz is inaudible to most (to me it is inaudible). But, way beyond that just the same, like my former SVS Subwoofers who do 12Hz (I forgot at how many "dB down" but alas).
So, when producing inaudible frequencies this emerges as air pressure changes we will perceive and it gives additional layers of whatever we are listening to.
How shocking it was for me when I found that in general (frequency point) no less than 22dB down the 2nd harmonic has to be in order to let the fundamental do its inaudible job ... So, no single way that picture above resembles anything that can be good for music. Effects maybe, but no wind effects. So what happens ?
(it is too easy to even think about once you know how it works)
Suppose we have 30Hz. Sounds nice. Then at the same SPL we create a 25Hz. Hey, it sounds higher in frequency ? Hmm ...
To understand better we go more down : We have 20Hz and it should be silent. Why ? well, we can't hear it as such. Not silent ? ah, then you hear the 2nd harmonic which is 40Hz. Easliy audible ! And so with that 25Hz sounding higher than 30Hz, what we'll perceive is HD and it plays at 50Hz.
Now let me tell you, when I'd sustain that red line in the picture and wich actually tells that any 2nd harmonic is allowed to be 10dB down before we'd perceive it as distortion ... NO WAY. When I would allow for 10% HD on that 20Hz tone, a most blasting 40Hz would be audible.
And again, it is so easy : When some frequency (like 20Hz) is not to produce any sound, how high in level would we think it's 2nd harmonic (like at the very audible 40Hz) is allowed to be ? Hey, that's actually nothing man !
With a fairly still good audible 25Hz things become different, because now it is about how the 2nd harmonic will be perceived louder by us than the 25Hz. Well, that is not so much. 30Hz is the most well audible by all of us, so here we indeed have more headroom. Now it really becomes a matter of how we can a. hear the 30Hz be distorted (this is way difficult I think) but b. how the 60Hz 2nd will start to be profound over the 30Hz. So here YMMV (since I did not sort out the exact figures for this, but which also is not necessary, which you will hopefully grasp by the below text.
What I did in the end was not so much testing the HD levels but merely tuning all so that no audible HD tones could be heard. This is subjective, but measurements support it to some degree, so I used that foremost.
What I did, I did because of the process of "functionality" and this was as follows :
Find an acceptable SPL for my personal listening levels. This was 86dB. So, just measured from normal music playing. 86dBSPL would be sufficient (but carefully read the below topics as well).
Look per frequency what the THD is; Important notice : the general level of THD while spades of headroom on the SPL was still available, is 0.3% (this is invisible at the in-room ambient noise levels of -90dB through microphone).
At some point at going downwards in the frequency spectrum the THD starts to grow. I forgot where, but this is not important. Important is where it grows so much that the SPL for that frequency apparently is too high. What came from this is that from under 30HZ downwards the SPL had to be squeezed. The limit for this I took was a general 3% because more than that is audible, but it includes some headroom so I actually followed 2%. So, at no frequency under 30Hz I allowed more than 2% THD. This is all the way down to 10Hz.
So for example, all the way down to 10Hz I did not allow myself to hear a single thing coming from the speakers, were it for the frequencies under 23Hz which I can not hear anyway, and thus *should not hear*.
The result of this is that a linear decreasing slope of 9dB is needed from 29Hz to 18Hz, which latter 18Hz was rated as " the -3dB level". Officially this now should read as "18Hz at -12dB".
This all explicitly assumes that while music in normal frequencies play at 86dB, the lowest frequencies would play at the same level. It is my idea that this is not much the case (I just see that when music is playing). However, when indeed that does not happen but say at -10dB instead, my "set" 86dB would be 96dB and all would still be OK.
Small notice : this was before I realized that "Beating" should theoretically imply higher levels from the normally playing frequencies, ad explained per previous post. Still I just see that it is the most rare that the lowest frequencies go all the way up in level. So I think I'm good with this strategy.
Speaking about a commercial speaker, the net result would be :
- That when you play at 86dBSPL - which for me would be suffecient in my 12x8x3m room - there's the guarantee that no audible distortions come form whatever crazy bass up to even 10Hz and lower.
- That most will have a smaller room, and that the smaller the room, the more perceived SPL in the listening seat will be there at the 86dBSPL at 1 meter (read : for most the perceived output can be significant higher than what I think is enough).
- That I perceived the total image of the music to be more clean; couldn't hear any distortion previously explicitly, but it should have been there.
- That by empirical finding whatever distortion has been there before does not imply these crazy basses; they are still there as they were.
- That ... it net does not work for the better.
Oh.
So, the perceived cleanness - which might be a placebo in the first place - at least causes the "air pressure" output to be less, and I sure perceive that. Maybe that is too much anyway, but I got used to it and now I am not sure this is net for the better.
All could be much moot because at e.g. 30Hz it is way tough to play too loud so 2nd (and beyond) harmonics are audible. Same counts for the THD % which is only 1.1% at louder than the calibration level already and with the knowledge that it was 0.8% at 6dB less output. So a very slow increase there, while in this area possibly the -10dB is allowed from the red line in the graph (I did not test that because way too loud). This 1.1% probably was at -20dB or so. Thus spades of headroom here.
And to keep in mind : the lot gets only really critical when actually almost no sound is to be heard and this non audibility fastly increases when going down from 29Hz.
The above said, not much plays explcitly in that area anyway. The reason is obvious : we can't hear it. That other thing, the "ambience" or what name we really should give it, is a far greater problem, once we allow our speakers to play in that area anyway. So, don't allow that (say cut at 27Hz) and there can't be a problem. In the mean time though, this "ambience" won't be there and this is what I can notice right away.
Of course, there's all kind of playground between my -9dB drop and 0dB drop which is related to the necessary SPL as explained. The smaller the room, the better it goes without distortion. At the far end this extends to : the more small the room, the lower we can go undistorted. Like 17Hz or 16Hz.
Whether this brings more ? My findings so far say Yes. The lower the better, because it is all in there.
Btw and FYI, with only one paramater in the DSP settings this slope can be set with full justification/consistency of further everything (example : the crossover should not change).
Hope this is helpful or even interesting ...
Peter