Re: Murphy Corner Line Array (MCLA)
A 3x5 should be fine. The Xmax may be adequate or not depending on the low end output the listener requires. I would encourage everyone to experiment if they have the time and inclination. You will almost certainly need to determine and setup your own custom EQ but that's not really hard to do. Don't expect the stunning bass capability of the MCLA with the ND90-8 if you use a less capable driver...but you may not need that level of output for your application. Remember I designed the MCLA to also use as the sound system for my band which is a much more demanding than the usual CD playback or home theater applications.
Regarding "missing highs" that some people report with line arrays: I still have my older 2-way line arrays (with 16 dome tweeters) which I listen to regularly as I have for 30+ years. I can't perform a quick A/B comparison because the old and new systems are in separate rooms on different floors. (apologies to Kathy Mattea) But I can definitely say that nothing appears to be missing in the new full range arrays...except for the crossover coloration. As a musician I definitely feel that I would hear if there were any missing harmonics. I can very easily hear the slightest "flanging" or "chorus effect" when I deliberately apply that type of effect to my guitar sound. Flanging is where you deliberately introduce a comb filter and then slowly sweep the notches around as a "sound effect". While I have definitely heard flanging with large scale concert sound systems when I walked the room while listening to pink noise, I have never heard it on either of my line arrays. In my opinion, there are no missing highs. The high end sounds constant as I walk around the room and as I change my listening height by sitting down or standing up. The MCLA is actually more consistent this way than my 2-way line arrays because I hear a very slight shift in response due to the crossover as I move laterally which changes the phase relationship between the woofers and tweeters. To me the full range array is more "ideal" with respect to shifting horizontal position.
Yes, it was a pain in the **** to cut 48 of those 3" holes. I can't imagine cutting ovals. This is why man invented NC machinery.
Yes, it is a full range line array stuffed in the corner. But I do believe the "image friendly" enclosure design is sufficiently novel that a US patent would have been possible. But that does not mean much these days...they still will patent things that have been in the public domain for seemingly forever. That's why I made such a fuss over the public disclosure. I want to make it easy for the patent examiner to deny anyone's patent application for a line array "stuffed in the corner". Someone could still obtain a patent and then have their lawyers hound anyone who was making the enclosures. The builders would then have to mount a lawsuit to overthrow the clearly bogus patent. That takes time and money. With the backing of the company I was working for I did manage to shut down harassment from attorneys for a patent holder trying to extort licensing fees for a "derived" crossover I was using in one of our products. I was rather arrogant in my response to their demand letter and explained to them how their patent was worthless because they had foolishly patented a circuit that was CLEARLY in the public domain long before their patent application was even filed. I included copies of the published papers detailing crossovers derived by subtraction and I never heard from them again. So I felt it important to make it very clear that this design is now in the public domain.
As you note, the design part for this closed box system was really quite simple. All that nasty crossover design stuff just vanishes...so does the nasty crossover sound coloration. I used to find myself making the case that a 2-way was always preferred over a 3-way (or higher) speaker because crossovers were a "necessary evil" that should be avoided whenever possible. Now I find myself making the case against using any crossover at all. While crossovers remain "evil", in my opinion, they are no longer "necessary" to achieve the highest quality sound reproduction.
Try this thought experiment...or maybe even try it for real. Imagine two identical wide range drivers (say the ND90) in separate closed boxes but with the drivers located close together. Now you add a crossover at, say, 2 or 3 kHz so that each driver operates over only a portion of the frequency range. Next you rig a switch to change between the crossed over pair and a single driver operating with no crossover. Then you conduct a listening test asking only if you can hear any difference. Do you think you could hear a difference? When I tried this test (around 30 years ago) I could always hear the difference. The crossover was always audible even in this "ideal" application of crossing between two identical wide range drivers in the middle of their operating range. In real 2-way systems we are always crossing between a larger driver and a smaller driver which just adds another layer of audibility as we introduce the "dispersion discontinuity" that attends the shift from a narrowing dispersion woofer to an ultra wide dispersion tweeter. All those audible effects completely go away when you eliminate the crossover. Try it yourself and tell us what you hear.
In the end I spent days measuring and tweaking the EQ to get it "just right". I am hoping that those who precisely clone my MCLA will not really need further EQ tweaking; or at least that it will be minimal. For me the hard part was building the enclosures. But I know that many DIYers excel at woodworking and I look forward to seeing some really good looking implementations of the MCLA. I guess I'm getting long winded here on this lazy Sunday afternoon.
Regards,
John
Originally posted by blamus
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A 3x5 should be fine. The Xmax may be adequate or not depending on the low end output the listener requires. I would encourage everyone to experiment if they have the time and inclination. You will almost certainly need to determine and setup your own custom EQ but that's not really hard to do. Don't expect the stunning bass capability of the MCLA with the ND90-8 if you use a less capable driver...but you may not need that level of output for your application. Remember I designed the MCLA to also use as the sound system for my band which is a much more demanding than the usual CD playback or home theater applications.
Regarding "missing highs" that some people report with line arrays: I still have my older 2-way line arrays (with 16 dome tweeters) which I listen to regularly as I have for 30+ years. I can't perform a quick A/B comparison because the old and new systems are in separate rooms on different floors. (apologies to Kathy Mattea) But I can definitely say that nothing appears to be missing in the new full range arrays...except for the crossover coloration. As a musician I definitely feel that I would hear if there were any missing harmonics. I can very easily hear the slightest "flanging" or "chorus effect" when I deliberately apply that type of effect to my guitar sound. Flanging is where you deliberately introduce a comb filter and then slowly sweep the notches around as a "sound effect". While I have definitely heard flanging with large scale concert sound systems when I walked the room while listening to pink noise, I have never heard it on either of my line arrays. In my opinion, there are no missing highs. The high end sounds constant as I walk around the room and as I change my listening height by sitting down or standing up. The MCLA is actually more consistent this way than my 2-way line arrays because I hear a very slight shift in response due to the crossover as I move laterally which changes the phase relationship between the woofers and tweeters. To me the full range array is more "ideal" with respect to shifting horizontal position.
Yes, it was a pain in the **** to cut 48 of those 3" holes. I can't imagine cutting ovals. This is why man invented NC machinery.
Yes, it is a full range line array stuffed in the corner. But I do believe the "image friendly" enclosure design is sufficiently novel that a US patent would have been possible. But that does not mean much these days...they still will patent things that have been in the public domain for seemingly forever. That's why I made such a fuss over the public disclosure. I want to make it easy for the patent examiner to deny anyone's patent application for a line array "stuffed in the corner". Someone could still obtain a patent and then have their lawyers hound anyone who was making the enclosures. The builders would then have to mount a lawsuit to overthrow the clearly bogus patent. That takes time and money. With the backing of the company I was working for I did manage to shut down harassment from attorneys for a patent holder trying to extort licensing fees for a "derived" crossover I was using in one of our products. I was rather arrogant in my response to their demand letter and explained to them how their patent was worthless because they had foolishly patented a circuit that was CLEARLY in the public domain long before their patent application was even filed. I included copies of the published papers detailing crossovers derived by subtraction and I never heard from them again. So I felt it important to make it very clear that this design is now in the public domain.
As you note, the design part for this closed box system was really quite simple. All that nasty crossover design stuff just vanishes...so does the nasty crossover sound coloration. I used to find myself making the case that a 2-way was always preferred over a 3-way (or higher) speaker because crossovers were a "necessary evil" that should be avoided whenever possible. Now I find myself making the case against using any crossover at all. While crossovers remain "evil", in my opinion, they are no longer "necessary" to achieve the highest quality sound reproduction.
Try this thought experiment...or maybe even try it for real. Imagine two identical wide range drivers (say the ND90) in separate closed boxes but with the drivers located close together. Now you add a crossover at, say, 2 or 3 kHz so that each driver operates over only a portion of the frequency range. Next you rig a switch to change between the crossed over pair and a single driver operating with no crossover. Then you conduct a listening test asking only if you can hear any difference. Do you think you could hear a difference? When I tried this test (around 30 years ago) I could always hear the difference. The crossover was always audible even in this "ideal" application of crossing between two identical wide range drivers in the middle of their operating range. In real 2-way systems we are always crossing between a larger driver and a smaller driver which just adds another layer of audibility as we introduce the "dispersion discontinuity" that attends the shift from a narrowing dispersion woofer to an ultra wide dispersion tweeter. All those audible effects completely go away when you eliminate the crossover. Try it yourself and tell us what you hear.
In the end I spent days measuring and tweaking the EQ to get it "just right". I am hoping that those who precisely clone my MCLA will not really need further EQ tweaking; or at least that it will be minimal. For me the hard part was building the enclosures. But I know that many DIYers excel at woodworking and I look forward to seeing some really good looking implementations of the MCLA. I guess I'm getting long winded here on this lazy Sunday afternoon.
Regards,
John
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