Audio
Engineering Society
Chicago SectionMeeting Recap - November 14, 2012
AES
Chicago Section Meeting Recap
Meeting
Date: November 14, 2012
Written
By: Ken Platz
Topic:
Designing a Flat-Panel Speaker
Presented
by: Richard
Stroud
The
November 14, 2012, meeting of the Chicago AES Section was held at
Shure Incorporated, located in Niles, Illinois. About forty audio
enthusiasts (members and non-members) attended the presentation in
the S.N. Shure Theater and then rotated in groups of eight into a
small conference room to listen to Richard’s demo of his
home-made flat-panel speakers.
Bob
Schulein introduced Richard by referencing their first meeting and
prior collaborations, provided Richard’s background and work
history in audio, and concluded with a great ‘matter of fact’
statement: “You can’t stop a guy like Dick Stroud.”
Right
off the bat I knew that I was going to be hooked as he started to
provide an overview of the common goals in creating a music
listening system. No matter what specific areas we find ourselves
in – work or hobby, we are all audio enthusiasts. We may have
not realized it at the time but Richard was slowly pulling us in,
appealing to our curiosity as to what are the factors that
contribute to either making or listening to good music.
He
described several aspects of a good music ‘listening system’
including: it provides an ‘emotional experience’, 20Hz to
20kHz bandwidth, produces spatial qualities, produces an image
height that is appropriate, presents a high level of realism and
believe-ability, and produces a listening experience where the
speakers should ‘totally disappear’.
Richard
then reviewed why he had chosen a dipole arrangement for his
listening experience. True dipoles create a figure 8 pattern that
ideally provide equal energy (or sound) dispersion off of the
front of the face of the speaker as to that produced off the rear
face of the speaker. By implementing an MTM (mid-tweeter-mid)
arrangement of the drivers, one has greater control of the
vertical directivity. He then described his specific flat-panel
speaker design by noting which drivers he chose, how he placed
their MTM location within the face of each speaker panel – using
software, his experimenting with passive and active crossover
designs, and even using a software program called ‘Edge’
(http://www.tolvan.com/)
to optimize his panel sizes (4 feet tall x 0.7meters wide).
Appealing to the true audiophile’s thinking that if you want it
done right, you’ll have to learn how to ‘do it yourself’
approach, he proudly offered that he was able to create an
enjoyable listening system for under $150 (for the pair excluding
the laptop, USB cable, and some software).
The
second half of the meeting allowed groups to rotate into the
conference room and listen to the flat-panel speakers while
Richard played various tracks. He encouraged people to sit or
stand at various positions within the large ‘sweet spot’. Even
if you walked up to the speakers’ center stage, you could walk
past their front face and still hear incredible imaging – a
listening experience that seemed to allow the flat-panel speakers
to ‘disappear’.
The
Chicago AES Section would like to extend a special thanks to
Richard Stroud for his presentation, for providing a demo of his
flat-panel speakers, and for letting us in on some of his secrets
of designing a great listening system.
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