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Centerlautsprecher zu Vox 250 light

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  • schnuffmaus
    Registrierter Benutzer
    • 28.02.2006
    • 47

    Centerlautsprecher zu Vox 250 light

    Hallo,

    ich möchte einen passenden Center zu meinen VOX 250 light bauen.
    Meine Idee wäre aus 2 x W130 S und 1 x G20 SC - dann würde die Optik übereinstimmen.
    Kann man die Weiche und die Gehäusegröße von der Vox übernehmen ?
    Alterativ habe ich zur Zeit den Center 130 im Einsatz - wäre hier ein einfacher Tausch der Lautsprecher möglich ?
    Was gibt es für alternative Bauvorschläge für mein Vorhaben.

    Viele Grüße und guten Rutsch ins Jahr 2011.

    Tobias
  • We-Ha
    Moderator
    • 26.09.2001
    • 12247

    #2
    Hast du dir dieses schon angeschaut ?

    http://www.visaton.de/de/bauvorschla...ght/index.html

    Kann dir allerdings aus eigener Erfahrung berischten, dass abgespeckte Center sich nicht sehr gut ins Klangbild einfügen.
    Tipps & Tricks für alle Wastels in Wolfgangs Bastelkeller , denn wie der Schreiner kann es keiner
    Ich habe Probleme für alle Lösungen !!! .-- ....

    Kommentar

    • schnuffmaus
      Registrierter Benutzer
      • 28.02.2006
      • 47

      #3
      Hallo,

      was heisst abgespeckt ?

      Gruss Tobias

      Kommentar

      • We-Ha
        Moderator
        • 26.09.2001
        • 12247

        #4
        Na eben keinen großen TT wie die Vox ...
        Tipps & Tricks für alle Wastels in Wolfgangs Bastelkeller , denn wie der Schreiner kann es keiner
        Ich habe Probleme für alle Lösungen !!! .-- ....

        Kommentar

        • schnuffmaus
          Registrierter Benutzer
          • 28.02.2006
          • 47

          #5
          Hallo und alles Gute im neuen Jahr,

          bin jetzt selbst fündig geworden - Couplet light als center.
          Ja - liegend - anders gehts es nicht.

          Wer hat eigendlich einen stehenden Center ?

          Gruß

          Tobias

          Kommentar

          • LANDO
            Registrierter Benutzer
            • 10.12.2004
            • 2186

            #6
            Zitat von We-Ha Beitrag anzeigen
            Hast du dir dieses schon angeschaut ?

            http://www.visaton.de/de/bauvorschla...ght/index.html

            Kann dir allerdings aus eigener Erfahrung berischten, dass abgespeckte Center sich nicht sehr gut ins Klangbild einfügen.
            Hi,

            genau die gleichen Erfahrungen habe ich auch gemacht.

            Am besten war deswegen bisher: Genau drei gleiche Front-Centerlautsprecher:

            Chassis, Weiche, Gehäuse. Anordnung

            Alles andere ware Kompromisslösungen und endeten immer mit Umstellen und Umbauen.

            Über liegende Couplets werden Dir noch andere hier etwas berichten können.

            Gruß
            Musikzimmer:
            B&G Matrix Magnetostat, Studio1 plus aktiven Tiefton (jeweils 2 x GF200)
            Hörzimmer mit Solitude
            Heimkino 2 mit Beamer: 5mal Acoustic Research AR15 mit TL-Sub
            Reckhorn A 404

            Kommentar

            • We-Ha
              Moderator
              • 26.09.2001
              • 12247

              #7
              Zitat von schnuffmaus Beitrag anzeigen
              ...
              Wer hat eigendlich einen stehenden Center ?

              Gruß

              Tobias
              Ich.
              Aber keine D'Appolito Anordnung !
              Du kannst es drehen und wenden wie du willst (oder zumindest ich): Mit einem liegenden Center bekommt man keinen homogenen Klang hin, nicht einmal einen Kompromiss.
              Auch wenn die Weiche angepasst wurde.
              Ich habe nachher bei der NUtzung der VOX 250 light den Center als Phantom eingestellt.
              Das heisst, physikalisch war keiner vorhanden.
              War aber um Längen besser, als jeder liegende D'Jupp.
              Tipps & Tricks für alle Wastels in Wolfgangs Bastelkeller , denn wie der Schreiner kann es keiner
              Ich habe Probleme für alle Lösungen !!! .-- ....

              Kommentar

              • Alfredo
                Registrierter Benutzer
                • 13.10.2010
                • 112

                #8
                Zitat von We-Ha Beitrag anzeigen
                Ich.
                Aber keine D'Appolito Anordnung !
                Du kannst es drehen und wenden wie du willst (oder zumindest ich): Mit einem liegenden Center bekommt man keinen homogenen Klang hin, nicht einmal einen Kompromiss.
                Auch wenn die Weiche angepasst wurde.
                Ich habe nachher bei der NUtzung der VOX 250 light den Center als Phantom eingestellt.
                Das heisst, physikalisch war keiner vorhanden.
                War aber um Längen besser, als jeder liegende D'Jupp.
                Na na na, das mag vielleicht stimmen. Aber eigentlich nur im absoluten 'Highend-Bereich'
                Wenn ein liegender Center sooooo schlimm ist, warum sind denn 99% aller Center-Lösungen liegend ??

                Also ich habe ja jetzt die Concorde als Front und werde jetzt dazu nach einer ähnlichen Variante wie Mr. Woofer einen Center dazu entwicklen.
                Und ohne das er jetzt schon fertig ist, bin ich davon fest überzeugt das das eine super klingende Lösung sein wird.

                Stehnder Center geht eh nur bei Kleinen Boxen, ansonsten müsste der TV ja in Deckenhöhe.

                Kommentar

                • walwal
                  Registrierter Benutzer
                  • 08.01.2003
                  • 28098

                  #9
                  Dann lies mal hier:

                  Center-Channel Speakers

                  peteraczel | 04 April, 2005 21:06

                  Center-Channel Speakers:

                  What the Industry (Even the "White Hats") Often Refuses to Tell You

                  By Tom Nousaine Contributing Editor
                  What’s wrong with two-channel stereo? The main problem: it’s a sweet-spot deal. Good spatial rendition requires that listeners sit on the centerline. Off-axis listeners get nearside bias—the stage and images follow them to the near speaker. Farther phantom sources, even for centered listeners, have a midband response-error characteristic (the Holman dip) and tend to produce soft, foggy images. While the latter characteristic is often preferred by artists because it helps mask vocal or performance deficiencies, it lessens accuracy of reproduction in home systems.

                  The biggest potential advantage of multichannel audio—and I’m not limiting myself to music only—is a stable soundstage with excellent placement and tracking of moving sound sources, a soundstage that doesn’t shift with listener position, perverting timbre, location, and direction, but provides an improved sense of ambience and envelopment. Two-channel playback is similar to looking into the performance space as opposed to being in it. In other words, with a high-performance multichannel recording everybody, even off-axis listeners, get a soundfield that doesn’t have to be dependent on listening position. It’s much easier to “go to the performance” with multichannel.

                  Because center stage is the primary focus of program content of practically all recorded sound, the center-channel speaker then becomes the single most important speaker in a system. It needs to have a flat response characteristic (natural timbre) and, because it services off-axis listeners and provides another sidewall first reflection into the listening area, it needs to have smooth off-axis response as well.

                  My observation about sound systems is that very few of them, including two-channel systems, use dead center as a listening position, except for occasional monitoring or demonstration purposes. Solitary listeners will often sit 10 to 15 or more degrees off axis. Auxiliary listening seats may be as far as 30 to 45 degrees off center. Few people, even those that are hardcore two-channel listeners, use a sweet-spot-only strategy. This further emphasizes the importance of center speakers for modern systems.

                  Looking at the market, I’ve found that nearly all center-channel speakers have a low, wide profile using an MTM—often called D’Appolito—array, with a pair of 4", 5.25", or 6" woofers flanking a dome tweeter. This style is decor-friendly, has a better partner acceptance quotient (PAQ?), and is physically well suited for perching atop a large-screen rear-projection display. While the driver layout of these speakers is sometimes called a D’Appolito array, few of them fit the criteria of the originator as to driver spacing, crossover frequency, and final response.

                  These speakers, even the better ones, have a universal characteristic: strong, sometimes severe, lobing in the horizontal plane, which will be launched into the listening area either through reflected sound or direct radiation to off-axis listeners. Fig. 1 displays an example of a typical, currently sold, MTM center channel speaker. Lobing begins at 7.5 degrees and by 22.5 degrees is quite strong. This is a sweet-spot device!

                  Fig. 2 and Fig. 3 are examples of a “better” MTM sold as a left-center-right (LCR) model for use at all channel locations. Used vertically, it has smooth, even response. Used horizontally, lobing is quite evident and, in my opinion, prevents this speaker from delivering an acceptable level of performance for use in a high-quality playback system that aims to accommodate anything but a single-listener sweet spot.

                  A few manufacturers address this condition. Fig. 4 and Fig. 5 show an MTM speaker that uses an offset tweeter. The tweeter is located above the line that connects the centers of the woofers. This particular speaker is also billed as an LCR model; the layout is the same for left, center, and right, with the center channel used horizontally. Fig. 6, also a two-way speaker, has a differing layout of horizontally arrayed drivers. Performance as a center channel is quite good, although the speaker is about the same “height” as a small vertically arrayed two-way speaker. Because of the unusual driver layout, directivity is somewhat different to the left and right sides of the speaker.

                  A few manufacturers make a coaxial center-channel speaker. Coaxial speakers usually have response anomalies caused by mounting the tweeter on a post that extends from the pole piece in the location where the dust cap would normally reside. Some of them use a tweeter that is suspended from a clip or assembly attached to the frame at the edge. This also causes acoustic shadowing, although it often works better than a post mount. One manufacturer uses a coaxial driver with the tweeter located where the dust cap is typically found. This is a logical extension of the coaxial idea, but every one of these devices I’ve used suffers from a response deviation at higher frequencies, which seems to be related to reflections from the tweeter radiating up the cone. A number of years ago DCM (the old DCM, not the Mitek company that currently markets the brand) had a coaxial speaker in which the tweeter was offset and mounted on a mesh screen in front of the woofer. As I recall, it worked pretty well. I wonder whatever happened to that idea?

                  Occasionally I run across a 2.5-way MTM system where one of the woofers is a passive radiator. These systems also display lobing, as will a 6.5" two-way when you lay it on its side, but performance varies to the left and right sides of the speaker. The basic problem remains: drivers operating side by side will show driver interference (off-axis lobing) in the crossover area where they are both operating. When the flanking drivers cover differing frequency ranges, directivity will vary left to right.

                  One method enthusiasts use to address a problem is simply to throw money at it. Fig. 7 shows a heavy, much larger, high-cost solution using exotic drivers. If you are rich enough, you too can buy a poor-performing channel. Just get out your checkbook. As a rule of thumb, hurling money at an audio problem or dilemma is nearly always a fast track to worse performance. In this case, the speaker has fairly uniform directivity—response is equally bad at all radiating angles.

                  I’ve had the opportunity to test hundreds of different loudspeaker systems over the past decade. From 80 to 100 Hz upward, the best systems—and I mean best in an absolute sense—have been 6.5" two-way designs. The speaker graphed in Fig. 8 is among the finest I’ve encountered. As you can see, it has tightly controlled directivity in the horizontal plane out to 60 degrees. This means that all listeners get the same basic sound quality, and reflected sound will be returned with the same timbre. There is a relatively small amount of lobing in the vertical plane, which means that this speaker sounds best vertically placed, and that’s how I use it. This cabinet is only 14" tall, looking almost graceful perched on a 50" rear projector, but hidden behind a 115" perforated screen even that doesn’t matter. What’s the downside? It doesn’t have adequate dynamic capability below 80 Hz. So what? If this were a full-range speaker, in the truest sense, I’d cross it over at 80 Hz anyway because center-channel placement always compromises bass performance.

                  Two-way speakers by manufacturers such as Paradigm, PSB, Polk, NHT, JBL, Boston Acoustics, and Infinity make excellent center-channel choices, often at remarkably low cost. The optimal center-channel speaker choice will usually be a good-quality, vertically deployed 6.5" two-way speaker. Good sound, even greater value.

                  One problem with this idea is that dealers are generally reluctant to sell these speakers in quantities of one. You generally have to buy a pair. But at these prices, why not? Better yet, can you dig out one of those 5.25" or 6.5" two-ways you have gathering dust in the basement?

                  Dedicated center-channel loudspeakers are designed and marketed as horizontally arrayed, low-profile, gracefully styled accessories for large-screen television. While the inclusion of a pair of woofers improves low-frequency capability, few of them will deliver an honest 40 Hz at the listening position and, frankly, there is no need for them to do so. They offer no other performance advantage, and most lack acceptable sound quality for more than one listener.

                  I’m amazed at how few people, even “the good guys in the white hats,” ever mention the disadvantages of the typical low-rider center channel. Even the best companies with the smartest designers seldom talk about this issue. They seem to be happy with performance that fits into a relatively narrow listening window and happily sell thousands of low-riders. Major magazines don’t seem to be interested in an exposé of the issue (“too technical”). High-end publications stubbornly cling to stereo. Still others subscribe to the unfortunate scheme of five full-range speakers with a single central listener, which is killing DVD-A and SACD.

                  The film people have always dragged the audio crowd kicking and screaming into the future. Where did most people first hear reproduced sound? Radio, of course, but that’s the last time that audio was a frontrunner. Stereo? At the movies. Dolby surround? At the cinema. True multichannel sound? THX-certified theaters. Dolby Digital, followed by DTS, is still the de facto multichannel standard.

                  Furthermore, film soundtracks are purposefully designed to accommodate an audience, a large audience. By contrast, many DVD-A and SACD recordings are mixed without a center channel, so we still get a stage that moves with the listener. Many are mixed according to the five-speaker format with the mixer centered in the sound field, so the end user is expected to use the same playback scheme.

                  Personally I love surround sound. In fact, I can’t live without surround sound for either movies or music. I also love having girls over for movies and music. So I’m just amazed that the DVD-A and SACD folks haven’t figured out that most customers no longer use the “motorcycle” paradigm for entertainment. (You can get more than one person on a motorcycle but only one gets to “ride” it.)

                  I’m a big fan. I hope this discussion will help you to make choices about the most important speaker in your multichannel system.

                  Graphs:

                  The solid traces represent on-axis (0°) response. The dotted traces are horizontally off axis at 15° intervals.

                  Fig. 1: A modern center-channel speaker. Note the lobing that starts dead center and gets more severe as radiating angle increases.


                  Fig. 2: Speaker is used vertically at all channel positions except center. Response is quite good—flat spectrum, well-controlled directivity.


                  Fig. 3: Same speaker as in Fig. 2 but used horizontally. Note the lobing near the crossover, which begins quickly and becomes relatively more severe at wider radiating angles.


                  Fig. 4: Used vertically, this LCR model with offset tweeter has a good spectrum and reasonably well-controlled directivity.


                  Fig. 5: Used horizontally, the same 3-way LCR with an offset tweeter actually works better than when vertically placed.


                  Fig. 6: This speaker uses an unusual driver layout. It has good performance but is still about a foot high in the horizontal position. Response is similar for both center-channel and other-channel use. However, the unusual layout means the speaker has somewhat different response to the left and the right .

                  Fig. 7: This expensive system with exotic drivers has somewhat uniform directivity but little else to recommend it.

                  Fig. 8: This vertically arrayed model has a flat spectral character and tightly controlled directivity to 60° off axis. Because it has a single 6.5" woofer, SPL capability below 80 Hz is diminished.

                  General | Permalink | Trackbacks (0)
                  Zuletzt geändert von walwal; 01.01.2011, 16:07.
                  „Audiophile verwenden ihre Geräte nicht, um Ihre Musik zu hören. Audiophile verwenden Ihre Musik, um ihre Geräte zu hören.“

                  Alan Parsons

                  Kommentar

                  • We-Ha
                    Moderator
                    • 26.09.2001
                    • 12247

                    #10
                    Zitat von Alfredo Beitrag anzeigen
                    ... und werde jetzt dazu nach einer ähnlichen Variante wie Mr. Woofer einen Center dazu entwicklen ...
                    Nun, und wie sieht Mr.Woofas Center aus ?
                    MT-HT-MT stehend !
                    http://www.mrwoofa.de/heimkino/mein_...t_komplett.jpg
                    Tipps & Tricks für alle Wastels in Wolfgangs Bastelkeller , denn wie der Schreiner kann es keiner
                    Ich habe Probleme für alle Lösungen !!! .-- ....

                    Kommentar

                    • walwal
                      Registrierter Benutzer
                      • 08.01.2003
                      • 28098

                      #11
                      Für HK ist meine Empfehlung 5 x die Bijou 170. Basta!
                      Plus Aktivsub.
                      „Audiophile verwenden ihre Geräte nicht, um Ihre Musik zu hören. Audiophile verwenden Ihre Musik, um ihre Geräte zu hören.“

                      Alan Parsons

                      Kommentar

                      • Alfredo
                        Registrierter Benutzer
                        • 13.10.2010
                        • 112

                        #12
                        Ähemmm danke für den Artikel, werd ihn auch sorgsam lesen.
                        Aber gibts da auch ne 3-Sätze Abhandlung davon ?
                        Sonst kann ich erst heute Abend antworten..

                        Aber ohne Ihn gelesen zu haben wird das Ergebniss wohl unweigerlich lauten das die beste Lösung ein stehender Center ist.
                        Nur......, bedenkt bitte hier alle, wer kann so was für sich realisieren????
                        Und wenn ich mir vorstelle, ich hätte ne Concorde (stehend) als Center, dann hätte ich nach dem TV gucken Genickstarre und müsste zum Orthopäden.
                        Ne dann doch lieber liegend, und das quentschen an Klangverlust werde ich bei 5.1
                        dann klaglos hinnehmen.

                        Und wenn es um Highend geht, dann höre ich eh nur Musik in Stereo.

                        Wobei ich natürlich schon davon ausgehe, das auch bei einem liegenden Center die Mittel-Hochton-Anordnung Vertikal ! erfolgt.
                        Somit dürfte die in Fig.3 zu sehende Senke nicht mehr so gravierend, wenn überhaupt vorhanden, ausfallen.

                        Kommentar

                        • Alfredo
                          Registrierter Benutzer
                          • 13.10.2010
                          • 112

                          #13
                          Sorry Jürgen, meine Antwort eben kam etwas spät.

                          Ja die Mittel-Hochton- Anordnung muss devfinitiv vertikal erfolgen.

                          5*Bijou ist natürlich auch super.
                          Aber ich machs dann der Qualität zu Liebe doch mit 3x Concorde und 2x Bijou 170 als Rear.

                          Kommentar

                          • walwal
                            Registrierter Benutzer
                            • 08.01.2003
                            • 28098

                            #14
                            Ich habe die wichtigsten Passagen fett/rot markiert, das reicht schon.
                            „Audiophile verwenden ihre Geräte nicht, um Ihre Musik zu hören. Audiophile verwenden Ihre Musik, um ihre Geräte zu hören.“

                            Alan Parsons

                            Kommentar

                            • schnuffmaus
                              Registrierter Benutzer
                              • 28.02.2006
                              • 47

                              #15
                              OK - verstehe ich - aber wer hat denn nun einen stehenden Center und die wie habt Ihr das (ohne große Umbauaktionen) in der Praxis gelöst ? Warum werden fast nur liegende Center angeboten ?

                              Viele Grüße

                              Tobias

                              Kommentar

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