Speakers: volume vs. frequency response

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shaunp

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How does the frequency response of a speaker change as you crank up the volume? Are there general rules like "the louder it is the more bass it has?" or are all speakers different? If there are general rules do they change for subwoofers, tweeters, horns, etc.? I'm working with Marshall Valvestate VS100 amp with a Marshall Gold Back Series speaker now (made by Eminence - SPKR-00043) and this question just came up. Now I know how little I know about speakers :). I'd like to eventually tie this knowledge into my micing setup (which mic to use for quiet vs. loud? where should it go?, etc.). For now though I'm mainly interested in the speakers themselves. Thanks for the help!
 
Sorry about the multiple threads

Somehow this ended up as multiple threads. I did my best to close out the others but couldn't delete them. Sorry guys.
 
There are three parts to the answer, what the human ear hears, what the speaker can produce and what the amplifier can produce.

The first part is the easiest. The human ear tends to hear less bass for softer volumes. This was discovered in the 30s by Fletcher and Munson at Bell labs and many web sites have references to the associated Fletcher-Munson curves. One reference is here:

http://www.webervst.com/fm.htm

The other two parts vary somewhat by product. Generally amp and speaker firms try to make products that are flat across the normal range of frequency and volume. Amplifiers are usually better at this than speakers.

Most single speakers have a limited range that they can produce sound with a flat response. Subs focus on the low end, tweeters on the high end, and others in the mid ranges. Most guitar cabinets have a single size speaker that is not flat across the full range. Most home stereo systems have multiple speakers and crossover electronics that come closer to full range flat response. There facts are before the volume aspect comes into play.

In your case, there is a fourth component, the mic and PA system you plan to use for your guitar rig. Basically a lot of variables.

However the answer is fairly simple. Place the mic and set the board to that combination that sounds best to you. Some prefer on axis micing and others off axis micing. Again do what sounds best to you. When I mix, I use a SM-57 on axis about 4 inches back from grill on center of speaker, but that’s just me…

Ed
 
shaunp said:
How does the frequency response of a speaker change as you crank up the volume?

Loudspeakers played at high power levels exhibit a phenomenon known as thermal power compression. Loudspeakers are very inefficient at converting electrical input to acoustical output. On a good day, this conversion factor might approach 5% (100 watts in = 5 acoustic watts out). So, what happened to the other 95 watts? It is dissipated from the voice coil as heat and heat is an enemy of good sound reproduction.

Now, the wire (typically copper) used to wind the voice coil has what we call a thermal coefficient of resistance...meaning that as the temperature of the wire increases, the resistance of the wire increases proportionally. If you're familiar with Ohm's Law, you know that one method of calculating power is the square of the voltage divided by the resistance, E^2/R. So, if our voltage is constant but our voice coil resistance is rising with temperature, the linearity of the power output of the speaker decreases as the voice coil temperature increases. Hence the term thermal power compression.

Well, you're thinking "that's all well and good...but what does it mean in the real world?" OK, take a look at the attached file, PC1.jpg. It shows the frequency response of a 4" cone midbass driver "cold" and after being driven with a 35 watt MLS stimulus (wideband test tone similar to pink noise) for 45 minutes.

What we see after 45 minutes is an average loss in sensitivity of 3-5 dB from the speaker's resonance frequency up to 2 kHz. Above 2 kHz the loss in sensitivity is as great as 15 dB (more on this later). This is a significant loss in sensitivity as the rule of thumb says you need to double your input power to gain 3dB of output from a loudspeaker.

Back to the loss of output above 2 kHz. This particular design used an aluminum voice coil bobbin and the transmission of heat from the bobbin up to the glue joint at the cone/bobbin junction changed the compliance of the adhesive (made the glue softer) which damped the high frequency transmission from the coil to the cone. Actually, this is probably the only positive effect of the voice coil heating. :D

What would happen if we could lower the operating temperature of the voice coil? Well, in a past life, I was a product manager for Ferrofluidics/Ferrotec, a company that manufactures ferrofluid for loudspeakers so I spent a fair amount of time dealing with loudspeaker thermal issues. I took the same loudspeaker under discussion and installed some ferrofluid in the magnetic air gap around the voice coil and repeated the measurements. The results are shown in the attached file PC2.jpg.

As you can see, the presence of the ferrofluid not only reduced the amount of thermal power compression, but it preserved the linearity of the speaker's output...i.e. if you scaled the hot curve up to meet the cold curve, there would be much more commonality between the two than what we saw in the non-ferrofluid results. In particular, the response above 2 kHz has been preserved since the heat from the voice coil was now being transfered through the ferrofluid to the magnet structure rather than up the bobbin and into the adhesive joint.

So, to summarize, heat is an enemy of good sound reproduction at high power levels. Power compression effects can be minimized not only through the use of ferrofluid but also but also through other design elements such as larger diameter voice coils and large magnet structures which also help to dissipate heat away from the voice coil and minimize the effects of thermal power compression.
 
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