Hi efficient speaker, bass problems


I know i'm going to take a severe tongue lashing for asking this question but . Is it me , whenever I hear low efficient speakers they don't seem to have a grip on the bass like less sensitive units ? The amount of bass is there , and some have good weight , and punch , but where is the control ?
tmsorosk
Hi Unsound,
Its all perception my friend.
I think of low as 82 to 86
mid as 87 to 91
mid-high as 92 to 94
high as 95 +
Thats just me, I can see others not considering a mid high, but in the past, I've been aske say about 93db in sensitivity, is this normal or high. I've always said
"Well, its really mid to high"
Or is 87 really mid-low? Who really knows.
Tim, I suppose that's about as good an answer as I could reasonably expect.
Atmasphere, 50 Watts is not very high, but, if they are indeed 109 dB watt/1 meter your point is well taken. That is, if that's the free standing sensitivity.
Apparently in reply to my post above, Timlub wrote: "Extension, dampning and efficiency are the tradeoffs. The vectors go in different directions. The op questions grip vs eff. The extension is not. as I understand. part of the query. But I'm all in for a free lunch of any kind. Elucidate."

Sorry for the late resopnse; I didn't check back in on this thread until just now.

First let me say that high damping is not necessarily desirable in and of itself; it is the in-room frequency response that we want to optimize because that is what correlates best with subjective preference. An overdamped speaker sounds... overdamped.

Suppose we have a fairly low-Q woofer in a considerably larger-then-optimum vented box. Let's say we're tuning to the upper 30's, giving us a -3 dB point in the upper 30's with a steep rolloff below that. With typical room gain, we're getting down to the mid 30's.

Now let's drive this same speaker with a low-damping-factor tube amp, but without changeing the tuning frequency. Boom! Quite literally - we now have a broad 2 dB hump across the middle of the bass region, and we've managed to push the -3 dB point south a little bit. So far this isn't a net improvement, but we're not done yet...

Let's drop the tuning frequency to the upper 20's, which elminates any peaking and gives us extension into the lower 30's before room gain. We're on the right track.

Now let's factor in room gain, and push the tuning down into the mid 20's. We get a nice gentle rolloff across the bass region that is approximately the inverse of room gain, and real-world extension into the upper 20's. In contrast, before our low-damping-factor amp came into play, we could have expected extension to the mid 30's after room gain.

This isn't hypothetical. I manufacture this speaker, and chose my woofer and box size and port system with all of this in mind. The scenario I've described doesn't necessarily play out with all high-efficiency speakers.

Duke
Hi Duke,
Not overly important, but your last post was responding to Lewhite.
Tim