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Why Coincident Coaxial Speakers Can Deliver Amazing Performance

Coincident Coaxial

A while back we published an article that looked at the issue of intermodulation distortion from coincident coaxial speakers. As the woofer cone moves forward and rearward from its rest position, it acts as moving waveguide for the tweeter. While the phenomenon is measurable, there are other considerations in a coincident speaker design that offer dramatic performance benefits not found in other designs. To balance the universal car audio karma state, let’s take a look at why coincident coaxial speakers can sound absolutely amazing.

Point-Source Speaker

You’ll often hear coincident coaxial designs described as a point-source speaker. While not 100% accurate, they are about as good as things get in the real world. In a true point-source speaker, every frequency would emanate from exactly the same infinitely small point in space. Because speakers need to move relatively large amounts of air to be efficient, we have to deal with cone diameters that are more significant. As with everything to do with audio reproduction, there are benefits and drawbacks.

Where a point-source speaker really shines is that the distance between the woofer and the tweeter remain constant no matter where the listener is positioned. This can be a stark contrast to a component speaker set, where the tweeter might come much nearer or farther as we move our heads around the listening environment. Why does this matter? Phase. Phase matters.

Coincident Coaxial
The Audison APX 6.5 is great example of an affordable, high-quality concentric coaxial speaker.
Coincident Coaxial
For those looking for good power handling and solid bass response, the Hertz MPX 165.3 Pro is a premium concentric coaxial speaker solution.

What Is Phase?

Any time we have two signals containing similar content, there will be a relationship between the peaks and valleys in those signals. If the peaks and valleys align, then the signals are described to be in phase. If the peaks from one source align with the valleys from another source, and the levels are the same, the signals cancel. Drop a pebble into a large puddle and watch as the waves ripple outward from the center then reflect back from the edge. Very quickly, you’ll see complex patterns emerge.

Coincident Coaxial
How different sounds at the same frequency interact relative to their stop and start time plays a significant role in what we hear from a car audio system.

When a passive crossover is designed or the technician working on your vehicle sets up a filter in a digital signal processor, the settings are correct for a single-phase relationship between the midrange driver and tweeter. If one component changes distance to the other, then the settings don’t work as well.

Even under perfect conditions, there is some unwanted summing and cancellation between a woofer and a tweeter as the phase relationship changes between the sounds they produce. This phenomenon can cause changes in sound level that are referred to as lobing. As result, there can be more energy at some frequencies than others depending on where the listener is positioned.

When most car audio systems were built using passive crossovers designed in simulation, the need to keep the woofer (or midrange) and tweeter as close as possible to each other was crucial. With a DSP, those rules have changed. The inclusion of signal delay capabilities has opened up a suite of entirely new installation options.

Coincident Coaxial
The MX-Series from Phoenix Gold includes their Dual Concentric design that helps to reduce frequency response anomalies.
Coincident Coaxial
Illusion Audio offers four coaxial speaker options like their C5CX 5.25-inch set that features a coincidentally mounted tweeter.
Coincident Coaxial
Some of the best-known high-end coincident coaxial speakers in the car audio industry are the Hybrid Integra offerings from Morel.

Keep Everything in Time

If you are having the car audio system in your vehicle upgraded, and you plan on having the system configured for driver and passenger enjoyment, it can be quite beneficial to implement a speaker solution that uses a coincident coaxial design. With this design, the distance from the listeners to both the woofer and the tweeter is consistent, ensuring good tonal balance and realism. Drop by your local specialty car stereo shop to find out about coincident coaxial speaker upgrades that can make your mobile audio system sound amazing.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Buying an Entry-Level Car Audio Subwoofer System? Read This First!

Car Subwoofer

Whether it’s Black Friday, Christmas, Back to School or just a regular sale, many car stereo shops around the country offer subwoofer system upgrade packages that let you add bass to your stereo at an affordable price. These packages typically include a 200-300 watt amplifier, a single subwoofer, an enclosure and an installation kit. We’ve noticed a trend in the choice of enclosure included in these systems. We want to offer some advice on an upgrade that will dramatically improve performance and value.

Sealed Versus Ported Subwoofer Enclosures

The goal of these car audio subwoofer upgrade packages is to deliver an affordable way to add bass to your vehicle. As such, the products these systems include are typically chosen based on their price rather than their combined performance. Most options include a 12-inch subwoofer and a sealed enclosure. While this combination works well, it might not offer the best bang for your buck. Let’s look at an example.

Let’s use an ARC Audio X2-Series X2-12D4 12-inch subwoofer as an example. It’s not an entry-level subwoofer compared to some of the low-cost options on the market, but its performance, build quality and capabilities make it worth every penny. The sub is rated to handle 250 watts of power. Let’s model it in a sealed enclosure with a net internal air volume of 1 cubic foot.

Car Subwoofer
Our ARC Audio X2-12D4 subwoofer’s predicted output in a 1-one-cubic-foot sealed enclosure.

As you can see, the response curve is nice and flat. By way of specifications, the system has a Qtc of 0.894 and an F3 frequency of 42 Hz. These numbers are ideal terms of delivering clear and accurate bass.

Less Subwoofer, More Enclosure

What if we switch things up a bit and go with a 10-inch subwoofer in a vented enclosure? This cost of the system might go up a little bit, but is it worth it? Let’s model the 10-inch version of that subwoofer in a vented enclosure with the same net 1-cubic-foot internal air volume. For this simulation, the enclosure has a tuning frequency of 33 Hz.

Car Subwoofer
The red trace is the X2-12D4 in the sealed enclosure, the yellow trace is the 10-inch X2-10D2 in a 1-cubic-foot vented enclosure.

You’d think we knew what was going to happen before we started writing, wouldn’t you? The 10-inch sub in the vented enclosure is louder at all frequencies between 20 Hz and 75 Hz. How much louder? We made this chart below to show you.

Car Subwoofer
Comparing the output of a 12-inch sub in a sealed enclosure to a 10-inch in a vented enclosure.

If the two systems’ differences were less than a decibel, the comparison would be a wash. The 10-inch sub in the vented enclosure produces around 3 dB more output from 40 to 50 hertz. This increase in output level is significant.

System Efficiency and Power

Aside from getting more output for a similar investment, there’s another way to look at this. Let’s say you want to listen at a specific volume level. The subwoofer in the vented enclosure can produce that output with less power. This means the amp won’t run as hot, the subwoofer won’t heat up and the amp will draw less current from the vehicle electrical system. We’ll add a power comparison to our graph above to show you just how much less is required for the same output.

Car Subwoofer
Just how much less power does the vented enclosure need to produce the same output? Almost half at some frequencies!

In the chart above, we compare the output of the 12-inch driver with 250 watts to the amount of power the 10-inch driver in the vented enclosure requires to produce the same result. At 45 hertz, the requirement is less than half the power. This equates to much less current draw on the electrical system in your car. It also means the voice coil of the subwoofer won’t heat up as much. This reduction in power to the sub can help reduce power compression and further improve the efficiency of the subwoofer system.

If you are wise with your purchasing strategies, you might ask if there are any drawbacks to using a vented enclosure instead of a sealed one. So long as the enclosure has a large enough vent and includes a smooth radius around the vent opening, there aren’t any issues. In addition, you can see that the overall shape of the response curve is similar to that of the sealed design, so the system will sound similar. In all honesty, it’s a win-win situation.

Upgrade Your Car Audio System with a Subwoofer

One of the best upgrades you can make to your car audio system is to add a subwoofer. So drop by a local specialty mobile enhancement retailer today to find out what’s available for your vehicle. If they have a subwoofer system package available, ask about upgrading to a vented enclosure. The improvement in efficiency will be worth every penny.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Car Audio Speaker Installation Location Matters

Speaker Installation Location

A while back we published an article that discussed why aiming speakers in a properly designed car audio system was futile. As usual, we received a good deal of feedback about the piece. The comments ranged from the typical “that’s not how it works” to more scientific discussions about how even minor changes in placement had significant effects on imaging and soundstage position. So let’s dive deeper into this discussion to flesh out some of the finer details in speaker positioning.

Proper Audio System Design

The first thing we need to discuss is proper audio system design and component selection. To deliver the most realistic listening experience possible, you need to choose high-quality speakers. Speakers that add significant distortion will lack clarity and detail and render all other efforts futile. Forget the hype about anti-resonant baskets and fancy cones – the technologies that dramatically reduce distortion are motor upgrades like shorting rings and copper inductance-reducing caps.

Speaker Installation Location
ARC Audio, Hertz and Audison offer a variety of high-performance midrange drivers that are easily integrated into custom installations.

Next, the speaker system needs to be designed and integrated into the vehicle in a way that ensures the even distribution of sound through the listening environment. This typically involves using a subwoofer, a set of woofers or midbass drivers, midrange speakers and tweeters. As our article on directivity explained, below a frequency where the effective circumference of the cone is equal to the sound wavelength, the sound is emitted evenly in all directions — as such, tilting a speaker up or down won’t change its perceived frequency. Keep this in mind, as we’ll circle back to it shortly.

Lastly, the speakers need to be chosen so that the high-frequency driver operating in the adjacent frequency range can play low enough to ensure that directivity doesn’t become an issue. Unfortunately, this statement confirms that using a two-way front stage with a 6.5-inch woofer is difficult, as most tweeters bundled in component sets can’t play low enough.

Speaker Placement Matters

When we talk about speaker placement for the front stage of our vehicles, the options are typically a stock location in the lower part of the front door, a location in the middle or upper portion of the door, the dash or in a custom pod on the A-pillar. It should come as no surprise that every location has a benefit and an equal number of drawbacks.

For midbass drivers used in a three-way front stage, the door location often works well. Some will go further with the installation and have custom mounting solutions created in the kick panels. If this driver is going to play up to 400 or 500 Hz, this “farther away” position can help with the perceived depth of the soundstage.

The same concept applies to midrange drivers. If they are installed in the doors, as would be found in many Porsches and BMWs, the soundstage can appear to span the car, but comes from a position that’s in line with the steering wheel. Mounting the speakers in pods on the A-pillars can move that soundstage deeper into the dash. Finally, speaker positions in the corners of the dash, right at the base of the windshield, are about as far away from the listening position as is possible and help to create a soundstage that seems to come from the rear edge of the hood. Some listeners don’t concern themselves with the sound source, while others weigh it heavily in their system design considerations.

Speaker Installation Location
Extreme Audio in Midlothian, Virginia, upgraded this 2017 BMW 530i with a set of 4-inch Audiofrog midrange drivers in the stock door locations.

The angle at which tweeters are aimed matters. Suppose you want to have any chance of hearing the highest of frequencies. In that case, tweeters need to be aimed toward the listening position or pointed up into the windshield so their output can reflect off the glass and “spray” into the vehicle interior. Tweeters mounted in sail panels can help to increase the perceived width of a soundstage – another consideration in where the music seems to come from.

Speaker Installation Location
Rockford Fosgate offers their 4-inch T3-BMW2 speakers as a drop-in upgrade for 1-, 3-, 5-, 6- and 7-Series Sedans and the X1 SUV.

What About Fine-Tuning Mounting Angles?

Much of the feedback on our article about speaker directivity was targeted at the fact that car audio system performance changed based on the angle at which the speakers were mounted. We don’t dispute this for one second. How a speaker performs in terms of directivity is a constant. How sounds reflect off of nearby surfaces plays a huge role in what we hear, even after setting signal delays and calibrating the system with an equalizer.

Let’s say you have a speaker mounted in an A-pillar, and it’s aimed directly across the vehicle. There will be immediate reflections off the windshield and, a moment later, off the side windows. Given their proximity to the speaker, these reflections may be almost as loud as the sound coming directly from the speaker cone. Another moment later, there may be a reflection off the roof and the dash. Vehicles are very complex and behave differently than a listening room or recording studio.

If we tilt the speaker in or out, up or down, we can change the path lengths from the edge of the speaker to the surfaces off of which the sound will reflect. Even a fraction of an inch will change how the sound these speakers produce interacts with these surfaces.

Speaker Installation Location
Autosound competition vehicles like Brian Mitchell’s Cadillac ELR often go through many A-pillar designs until one that balances every aspect of their performance is achieved.

Let’s Look at An Example

Let’s say you have a Porsche 911 or Boxster with a midrange speaker location in the middle of the door. A number of 2.5- and 3-inch midrange drivers will perform excellently in that location. On the inside of the car, there is almost nothing near the speaker that will cause a significant reflection, other than the smooth surface of the door panel itself. In terms of delivering a predictable performance that won’t require significant equalization, this is as close to an ideal mounting location as is possible in a car or truck.

Is this the perfect location, though? What if you like the sound to appear to come from the windshield or dash of the vehicle, or even out on the hood? Will this speaker location offer that? It isn’t very likely. The soundstage is apt to seem very shallow. Tonally, the system may sound excellent, and the lack of nearby reflections should offer impressive clarity.

Speaker Installation Location
This 2014 Porsche Cayman was upgraded with new speakers by Westminster Speed and Sound in Maryland.

If we put those same speakers in small enclosures up on the dash, just as we described above, the sound will reflect off of every surface imaginable. We can make the system sound good with an equalizer, but the interaction of multiple reflections won’t deliver the same amount of clarity.

Balance the Benefits and Drawbacks

The goal of any speaker system design (i.e., the placement and configuration of the drivers in a listening application) requires balancing the benefits and drawbacks of each location. The specialty mobile enhancement retailer you are working with can help explain each location’s benefits and disadvantages. Together, you can choose a solution that will deliver the sonic performance and aesthetics you want from your upgrade.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Understanding Light Color and Illumination

Headlight Color

We took our first look at measuring light sources a while back as our first step toward understanding the differences in automotive headlight options. In this article, we’ll provide a practical demonstration of why it’s crucial for the lighting on your car, truck, motorcycle, ATV or side-by-side to emit light that covers the entire color spectrum evenly.

Light Sources and the Human Body

Light waves work similarly to sound waves in that both our eyes and ears are sensitive to a specific range of frequencies. For sound, most adults can hear from 20 Hz to around 15 kHz and see light in the range of 400 to 790 THz (terahertz). Sounds above 15 or 20 kHz are imperceivable as our ears don’t detect those signals and send the information to our brain. Likewise, energy below 400 THz (which is infrared) isn’t seen by our eyes but can be felt as heat on our skin. Frequencies above 790 THz, which is ultraviolet light, are also invisible to our eyes but can cause skin damage in the form of sunburn. Butterflies, some birds, reindeer and sockeye salmon can see ultraviolet light. At the other end of the spectrum, some snakes, fish and frogs can see infrared light.

How Our Eyes Perceive Objects

If you shine a white light at an object, that object reflects specific colors to our eyes. Those reflected colors match the color of the object. So, if you shine white light on a blue car, then blue light wavelengths are reflected to your eyes. The same goes for the yellow lane markings on the road and green grass on the boulevard or median.

Headlight Color
We see objects as being a specific color because only specific light rays from a source are reflected to our eyes.

Let’s put this concept into a set of simple rules. First, we’ll consider the sun on a cloudless day as a near-perfect light source. The sun emits light energy that’s very evenly distributed through the color spectrum.

Headlight Color
Light from the sun on a clear day contains relatively even energy across the color spectrum.

If you look at the spectrographic analysis of the light from the sun shown above, you can see that from light blue through to light red, the spectral density is fairly similar.

What if Color Is Missing from a Light Source?

We’ll set up a demonstration to show what happens when a specific color of light is missing from a light source and how that affects the way we perceive objects. We have a set of RGB LED strip lights set 18 inches away from a selection of Hot Wheels cars for this demonstration. We can use the smartphone app to choose which of the LEDs are on. First, we’ll take pictures of the cars with the camera flash, then with just the red, then the green, then the blue LEDs on so you can see which cars light up and which don’t.

Headlight Color
Our collection of Hot Wheels is illuminated by the white camera flash.
Headlight Color
Our collection of Hot Wheels is illuminated by only red LEDs.
Headlight Color
Our collection of Hot Wheels is illuminated by only green LEDs.
Headlight Color
Our collection of Hot Wheels is illuminated by only blue LEDs.

If you compare the photo of the cars illuminated with the flash to those with only single colors of lights, we can see that some vehicles are quite dark. In the image with the red LEDs, the green and blue cars remain dark. In the image with the green lighting, the red and blue cars are dark. It should now come as no surprise that the red and green cars look dark in the image with the blue lighting.

Going back to our rules concept, if our light source doesn’t offer light energy that matches the color of an object, we won’t perceive that object as being illuminated.

Just for references, we’ll include spectrographic analysis of the red, green and blue LEDs so you can see how narrowly focussed their light output is.

Headlight Color
Spectrographic analysis of our red LEDs.
Headlight Color
Spectrographic analysis of our green LEDs.
Headlight Color
Spectrographic analysis of our blue LEDs.

We are getting close to a point where we have enough information and understanding of how light works to analyze and understand the color content of different headlight bulb options. So please don’t fret; we’ll get to that information soon! In the meantime, if your headlights aren’t bright enough, drop by your local specialty mobile enhancement retailer and ask them about options to upgrade the lighting system on your car or truck.

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Lighting, RESOURCE LIBRARY

Single Amplifier Distortion Specs Make No Sense

Distortion Specifications

Have you ever looked at something and thought you were only getting part of the story? Many previous articles have discussed amplifier distortion at length but haven’t delved into how power output levels and frequency affect distortion measurements. If you’re looking for the best amplifier for your car audio system, especially for midrange drivers and tweeters, this information should be crucial to your purchasing decision.

Amplifier Distortion Specifications

If you’re browsing a car audio amplifier manufacturer’s website, you’ll see a single specification that’s intended to quantify the amount of distortion an amplifier adds to the audio signal. The CTA-2006-C standard requires that the total harmonic distortion and noise added to the audio signal be specified at an output level that is 50% of the maximum rated output for the amplifier. Of course, that power rating needs to comply with the CTA-2006-C standard as well.

Measuring Amplifier Distortion

When an amplifier is being tested for distortion, the technician or engineer will typically look at the harmonic information and noise added to a single test tone.

Distortion Specifications
This amplifier has a THD+N specification of 0.07527% when powering a 4-ohm load with 1 watt of power.

In the measurement above, you can see the test signal at 1 kHz at a level of 2.0 volts. The second harmonic (labelled with the pink 3) is at a level of -77.10 dBV, or 83.15 dB below the 6.03 dBV (2.00V) test signal. The third-order harmonic (labelled with the pink 1) is louder at an absolute level of -68.18 dBV and a relative level of -74.23 dB. You can see the pattern of even and odd harmonics continue well past 20 kHz. It’s worth noting that this is a good Class AB amplifier and not a poorly designed, inexpensive unit.

Sadly, this single specification is quite incomplete in terms of telling the whole story. Audio measurement and analyzer devices like those from Audio Precision and QuantAsylum can generate distortion graphs across a range of power output levels and frequencies. So let’s characterize this amplifier in terms of the amount of distortion it adds to an audio signal based on the amount of power it produces.

Distortion Specifications
A graph of amplifier output power (in dBV) versus total harmonic distortion and noise for our test amplifier.

Before we dive into analyzing the data, we should explain that the horizontal X-axis scale is in decibel volts, known as dBV. This way of looking at voltage represents the amplifier output level using a decibel scale with 1 volt as 0 dB. Thus, the equation to convert dBV to a voltage is 10 ^ (dBV/20).

The output level of 6.03 dBV, where we measured %THD+N in the first chart, would be 2.00 volts. At the low level, distortion is at 0.075%. At an output level of 22.6 dBV, you can see that the distortion increased. This level is the point where the amplifier started to run into clipping. Maximum power output measurements are specified at the output level that corresponds to a THD+N of 1%. For this amplifier, that would be about 24 dBV, or 63 watts into a 4-ohm load.

At the other end of the scale, you can see that distortion increases as output power decreases. This performance is very typical for a Class-AB amplifier. At very low levels, the harmonic distortion content is buried in the noise created by the amp, which for this unit is at about -105 dBV. Crossover distortion at very low volume levels plays a significant role in adding unwanted information to the audio signal. As the output level increases, the audio signal passes through the transition between the positive and negative output devices at a steeper slope, reducing the time the signal spends in this transition region. As such, distortion decreases relative to the output level.

The CTA-2006 THD+N specification for this amplifier would be 0.02% at the output level of 21 dBV (-3 dB from the maximum power output level). This information doesn’t do a good job of describing how well the amp performs in a real-world application since most of the time, we’re only using a fraction of the power available to drive a speaker. For example, if we have a midrange speaker or a tweeter in a three-way system, we may only need 1/10 to 1/20 of the power a midbass speaker would need, or even less than a subwoofer. Played at high volume levels, a tweeter rarely needs more than a few watts.

So far, in all the TestDriveReview product evaluations we’ve published, the distortion has been specified at the same level as the signal-to-noise ratio. This would be at an output level of 1 watt in a 4-ohm load or 2.00 volts. From now on, we’ll include the Power versus THD+N graphs as shown above so readers can see the entire picture of how the amplifier behaves.

Distortion Specifications
Rockford Fosgate keeps their distortion specifications simple; they rate their amplifiers like this T1000-4ad to produce less than 1% THD+N.
Distortion Specifications
The XM-GS4 four-channel amplifier from Sony has a THD+N specification of 0.05% or less at 1 kHz when connected for a 4-ohm load.
Distortion Specifications
Hertz’s ML Power 4 four-channel amplifier has a distortion specification of 0.08% at 100 Hz when connected to a 4-ohm load.
Distortion Specifications
The AV due from Audison’s Voce series has a distortion spec of 0.04% at 1 kHz into 4 ohms.

Distortion Versus Frequency Response

Another characteristic often overlooked is the amount of distortion an amplifier adds relative to different frequencies. We ran another test on this amplifier to characterize this. We used an output level of 1.95 volts (very close to our 2.00-volt number) and measured distortion at frequencies from 20 Hz to 20 kHz.

Distortion Specifications
Distortion versus frequency for our Class-AB car audio amplifier.

While the numbers don’t vary as much compared to output level changes, you can see that there’s more distortion added at higher frequencies compared to midrange levels.

In an upcoming article, we’ll start all over with a new set of measurements with the three amplifiers we used in the What Do Better Amplifiers Sound Like article a few years ago. We’ll throw in a Class-D amp or two to round out the mix, so you’ll have a benchmark from which to compare solutions.

In the meantime, if you’re interested in purchasing an amplifier for your car or truck, drop by your local specialty mobile enhancement retailer today and ask them about a high-performance solution that will make your music sound amazing!

This article is written and produced by the team at www.BestCarAudio.com. Reproduction or use of any kind is prohibited without the express written permission of 1sixty8 media.

Filed Under: ARTICLES, Car Audio, RESOURCE LIBRARY

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