I need a small midrange for an upcoming project. The Scan Speak 10F is a class leader. Can the Faital Pro come close for about half the cost?
To make the measurements, I clamped both drivers in a test jig - e.g. no baffle, sometimes referred to as the "nude" driver response. I was most interested in distortion performance. I didn't measure it, but I would guesstimate that the SPL in the "passband" above 2kHz reached 90dB or so. It was too loud to be in the room when a single tone was playing.
I did frequency response measurements in ARTA using the "center impulse in window" so that I could get some distortion info. Next I used STEPS to measure the distortion in a more accurate way. The distortion is plotted both as SPL and percent distortion.
The winner? Well I didn't expect anything else... it's the 10F. But I wanted to see how much worse the distortion of the Faital Pro would be. Answer: not even remotely close! See the plots below for the data, and decide for yourself.
In my application I will be using the driver "nude" down to about 700Hz. This will require on the order of 12dB of boost, starting around 2kHz at the dipole peak and increasing as the frequency decreases, to bring up the drooping response. With that much boost, distortion performance is very important. As you can see, the 10F has slowly increasing distortion with decreasing frequency but its still reasonable. I have seen other tests by MarkK and Zaph (?) that show just how good this driver is even when driven hard.
The Faital Pro does have an edge WRT sensitivity, with about 2dB more output for the same input voltage (see red+blue FR plot). It might make a nice midrange but compared to other drivers in the $40ish range I am not sure it is a standout.
I'd like to thank BenchTester for loaning me a 10F pair. Thanks and I haven't forgotten about you! Looks like I will have to break down and get a pair of these for myself.
-Charlie
To make the measurements, I clamped both drivers in a test jig - e.g. no baffle, sometimes referred to as the "nude" driver response. I was most interested in distortion performance. I didn't measure it, but I would guesstimate that the SPL in the "passband" above 2kHz reached 90dB or so. It was too loud to be in the room when a single tone was playing.
I did frequency response measurements in ARTA using the "center impulse in window" so that I could get some distortion info. Next I used STEPS to measure the distortion in a more accurate way. The distortion is plotted both as SPL and percent distortion.
The winner? Well I didn't expect anything else... it's the 10F. But I wanted to see how much worse the distortion of the Faital Pro would be. Answer: not even remotely close! See the plots below for the data, and decide for yourself.
In my application I will be using the driver "nude" down to about 700Hz. This will require on the order of 12dB of boost, starting around 2kHz at the dipole peak and increasing as the frequency decreases, to bring up the drooping response. With that much boost, distortion performance is very important. As you can see, the 10F has slowly increasing distortion with decreasing frequency but its still reasonable. I have seen other tests by MarkK and Zaph (?) that show just how good this driver is even when driven hard.
The Faital Pro does have an edge WRT sensitivity, with about 2dB more output for the same input voltage (see red+blue FR plot). It might make a nice midrange but compared to other drivers in the $40ish range I am not sure it is a standout.
I'd like to thank BenchTester for loaning me a 10F pair. Thanks and I haven't forgotten about you! Looks like I will have to break down and get a pair of these for myself.
-Charlie
Comment