viren bakhshi
Well-Known Member
Guys,
You are getting caught up in semantics, which is typical of all audiophile discussions.
The bulk of music falls in the 40Hz - 16kHz region; I would say close to 95%. If a speaker can reproduce that range, it definitely is full range. Subwoofer territory I call extended range!
Also there is a mistaken notion of the role of the speaker cabinet. The cabinet primarily defines the low end response of the system. Obviously, the small drivers can't move much air to fully reproduce low frequencies - the cabinet increases their efficiency to do so. In the transmission line designs, which is what the Lyrita Harmony Ones and Twos are, the driver excites the air column at low frequencies, a resonance develops and builds up in amplitude. The cabinet helps the driver.
Regards,
Viren
You are getting caught up in semantics, which is typical of all audiophile discussions.
The bulk of music falls in the 40Hz - 16kHz region; I would say close to 95%. If a speaker can reproduce that range, it definitely is full range. Subwoofer territory I call extended range!
Also there is a mistaken notion of the role of the speaker cabinet. The cabinet primarily defines the low end response of the system. Obviously, the small drivers can't move much air to fully reproduce low frequencies - the cabinet increases their efficiency to do so. In the transmission line designs, which is what the Lyrita Harmony Ones and Twos are, the driver excites the air column at low frequencies, a resonance develops and builds up in amplitude. The cabinet helps the driver.
Regards,
Viren