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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by Applesauce
I can't help you with summarizing the substitutions. (I do know that the information is all here in this thread, because I've been following it since the beginning, and I think the RS28A was belatedly deemed a drop-in replacement for the RS28A-S, but someone else should chime in to confirm...)
That said, there are two RS28A-S still available at Solen:
http://www.solen.ca/pub/cms_nf_catal...d=2104&nobut=1
I bought mine from there (six months ago when there were four available - not exactly hot sellers!) with the sole intention of building exactly this speaker as Jeff laid it out to begin with. I haven't got around to it yet... But soon, I hope. Soon!
Yes. I beleive it was Pau Carmody who measured both and found they had identical roll-offs. The original data indicated otherwise. From his measurements it looks like the regular RS28a would work fine. In fact, from all I have seen the RS28F should too, since I applied no response shaping to the tweeter's top end in this design.
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
Thx, Applesauce. I checked that link out, but the pricing, shipping, customs (if I read/understand it correctly) is kind of cost prohibitive, especially this time of year, for me. It totals about $160 or $170, I think.
These will be used in a 50 liter, curved speaker that I started about in another thread. It was originally for the Nat P's, but I think the footprint of the curved speaker will not give me enough space for that XO; therefore, the interest in this design when I came across it. I do already have the bracing/skeleton cut out for that shape and size. (I assume I can increase the volume with no tweaking of the crossover?).
Jeff, if you think the rs28a is good for the original design you show (no audible differences), then, I think that is the way I will go and what I will get.
Please let me know if my thinking is wrong and I need to change something.
thx,
Frank--Still the one
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
I will second Paul Carmody's assessment of the A/F versions. I have both here, and am able to drop either one into a current build, and the response plots with XOs applied is identical, save the top octave.
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
How audible would you think a difference in crossover point between 1700 on the woofers versus 1800hz on the tweeter be?...if I used a tweeter that was pre-set by design to roll off at 24db/octave at 1800 and cannot be made to go lower? This is sort of a goofy question but I have a friend who has a pair of RAAL 70xrs and we were considering repurposing some old speaker cabinets for fun. YES..RS-180s are not Seas or Scan Speak but it may be a fun experiment none the less.
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by billschulte
How audible would you think a difference in crossover point between 1700 on the woofers versus 1800hz on the tweeter be?...if I used a tweeter that was pre-set by design to roll off at 24db/octave at 1800 and cannot be made to go lower? This is sort of a goofy question but I have a friend who has a pair of RAAL 70xrs and we were considering repurposing some old speaker cabinets for fun. YES..RS-180s are not Seas or Scan Speak but it may be a fun experiment none the less.
If the phase is tracking well, the slight dip in summation at the XO point is likely to be inaudible.
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by Jeff B.
Yes. I believe it was Paul Carmody who measured both and found they had identical roll-offs. The original data indicated otherwise. From his measurements it looks like the regular RS28a would work fine. In fact, from all I have seen the RS28F should too, since I applied no response shaping to the tweeter's top end in this design.
I modeled the RS28A and RS28F using some frd files I worked up from another project. The tweeter placement is close with my model being 1.5" off center and your actual design being 1" off center. So you should attribute any differences under 5Khz to the 1/2 inch difference in offset and the diffraction caused by the woofers mounted in the baffles, but the top 2 octaves should be accurate. While it does look to be a drop in around the xover region, it is about 1.5db to 2db hotter with the RS28F from 6khz on up. The frd files for both tweeters were created from the RS28A and RS28F measurements done by John Krutke. See results below:
RS28A Vs. RS28F with xover applied

Another forum member built them and implemented a zobel to bring the top end down to match the RS28AS, you can see some measurements he did here in post #36.
Chris
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by czag
I modeled the RS28A and RS28F using some frd files I worked up from another project. The tweeter placement is close with my model being 1.5" off center and your actual design being 1" off center. So you should attribute any differences under 5Khz to the 1/2 inch difference in offset and the diffraction caused by the woofers mounted in the baffles, but the top 2 octaves should be accurate. While it does look to be a drop in around the xover region, it is about 1.5db to 2db hotter with the RS28F from 6khz on up. The frd files for both tweeters were created from the RS28A and RS28F measurements done by John Krutke. See results below:
RS28A Vs. RS28F with xover applied
Another forum member built them and implemented a zobel to bring the top end down to match the RS28AS, you can see some measurements he did here in post #36.
Chris
The current RS28a's are almost 2dB more sensitive than early versions. Plots I have seen of current tweeters (A and F versions) overlay each other almost perfectly except for the response above 15kHz. By the way, I don't get quite that much rise at the top of my RS28F.
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by Jeff B.
The current RS28a's are almost 2dB more sensitive than early versions. Plots I have seen of current tweeters (A and F versions) overlay each other almost perfectly except for the response above 15kHz. By the way, I don't get quite that much rise at the top of my RS28F.
That is what John's test showed also, this model was made from a newer unit with 91db sensitivity for the RS28A. These differences could very well be attributed to Dayton's unit to unit variability. There was about 1.5db difference in sensitivity between the batch of 5 RS28F that John tested for me. I used the one with about 91.5 sensitivity for the RS28F since that seemed to be about the average for the 5 units I have.
When I modeled it the extra top end rise seemed to come from the xover being applied.

I do not want to come off as if I am picking you design apart, it is by all accounts a great design. I just wanted to point out that these 2 tweeters may not be drop in replacements in every design due to the differences in top end and unit to unit consistency. This was just something I noticed when working on my own project with a similar tweeter xover topology , but with different woofers.
Chris
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by czag
That is what John's test showed also, this model was made from a newer unit with 91db sensitivity for the RS28A. These differences could very well be attributed to Dayton's unit to unit variability. There was about 1.5db difference in sensitivity between the batch of 5 RS28F that John tested for me. I used the one with about 91.5 sensitivity for the RS28F since that seemed to be about the average for the 5 units I have.
When I modeled it the extra top end rise seemed to come from the xover being applied.
I do not want to come off as if I am picking you design apart, it is by all accounts a great design. I just wanted to point out that these 2 tweeters may not be drop in replacements in every design due to the differences in top end and unit to unit consistency. This was just something I noticed when working on my own project with a similar tweeter xover topology , but with different woofers.
Chris
As I pointed out in other posts in this thread - my design was with the RS28AS. I have never built it, or adjusted it for any other tweeters, so you're not picking apart my design. Substituting tweeters is completely up to the end user. A lot of that gets discussed here too. Adustments are easy to make though, and shouldn't be a problem for anyone wanting to go down that road.
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by Jeff B.
As I pointed out in other posts in this thread - my design was with the RS28AS. I have never built it, or adjusted it for any other tweeters, so you're not picking apart my design. Substituting tweeters is completely up to the end user. A lot of that gets discussed here too. Adustments are easy to make though, and shouldn't be a problem for anyone wanting to go down that road.
Understood. Members are trying whatever they can to make this design work for them with a different RS tweeter because you developed such a simple but effective xover. I'm glad you decided to share it and your xover design programs, I am sure I wouldn't be nearly this deep into speaker building if you had not developed PCD.
Chris
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by billschulte
as an uninformed observer of this site, I have been following this section closely. I would like to do a bi-amp of a single Dayton RS180(8 or 4) and found Jeff Bagby's Denhams response shaping network. Does anyone have a network like this worked up for a single RS 180?
I am skipping the bi-amp stuff above...Jeff would this passive crossover work for a single RS-180-4?
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by billschulte
I am skipping the bi-amp stuff above...Jeff would this passive crossover work for a single RS-180-4?
The lowpass and highpass sections will work fine, but you will need to pad down the tweeter about 3dB.
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
sorry i am late to the party, but is there a kit for this?
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by smokarz
sorry i am late to the party, but is there a kit for this?
Just what I posted at the top of the thread.
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by Jeff B.
As I pointed out in other posts in this thread - my design was with the RS28AS.
Back when I worked up designs for the RS28A and RS28AS versions, I found that they were not interchangeable. YMMV.
C
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by cjd
Back when I worked up designs for the RS28A and RS28AS versions, I found that they were not interchangeable. YMMV.
C
That's what I thought too based on the published curves. However, someone who measured both under the same conditions appearred to contradict this by showing them to be very close in response. Did you measure them yourself and establish that they would not interchange? I would have, but I didn't think to do it when I had both here at the same time.
Jeff
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by Jeff B.
That's what I thought too based on the published curves. However, someone who measured both under the same conditions appearred to contradict this by showing them to be very close in response. Did you measure them yourself and establish that they would not interchange? I would have, but I didn't think to do it when I had both here at the same time.
Jeff
I honestly don't remember if I had one on hand along the way or not but I think I did not. I think I did some fiddling with someone elses measured data, not my own. The MTM I put together (RS150) was definitely using PE's published FRD/ZMA from back when they offered those, along with modeled diffraction, etc (though the specifics of the process, the exact diffraction and baffle step, were backed up with measured data on the plain RS28A as well as the 27TDFC so I have a high level of confidence in its accuracy.) It does come down to the particulars of the crossover though, and I never did look into why. The lower the crossover, and the steeper the slopes, the more trouble.
C
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
I'm not sure how much action this thread is still getting but I was wondering if this crossover would be kosher to use with the extended bass towers documented in other threads? I was looking at building the 1.7cu ft Nat P's, but stumbled across Jeff's new design. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
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Re: My RS180 MTM Design
 Originally Posted by coniacvsop
I'm not sure how much action this thread is still getting but I was wondering if this crossover would be kosher to use with the extended bass towers documented in other threads? I was looking at building the 1.7cu ft Nat P's, but stumbled across Jeff's new design. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
I guess I don't read many threads anymore, so I'm not sure I know exactly what you are referring to. Are you talking about building my speaker in a larger tower version to extend the bass? If so, it should work well if you keep the baffle width about the same and get the tweeter to the right listening height. (You might want to weight the bottom fairly well to avoid any top-heavy issues.)
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04-22-2012, 10:31 AM
#100
Re: My RS180 MTM Design
I built mine in larger enclosures , I believe around 1.6 cubic feet , kept the baffle width and driver layout the same , and they sound incredible.
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