JBL Technical Note - Vol.1, No.31 电路原理图.pdf
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1、1 Technical Notes Volume 1, Number 31 Progressive TransitionTM (PT) Waveguides Background: The modern constant-directivity horn has evolved slowly since its introduction over 25 years ago. Advances in horn design have been primary evolutionary in nature. Indeed current popular constant directivity h
2、orns appear strikingly similar to the first devices, which at their time, defined a revolutionary change in design philosophy. Horn design involves balancing compromise. Key performance parameters that can be controlled by the designer include: frequency response (both on- and off-axis), horizontal
3、and vertical beamwidth, directivity index, electrical impedance, harmonic distortion, and low frequency cut-off. The designer may also manipulate the acoustic wave-front to generate a desirable radiation pattern that smoothly transitions from horizontal to vertical. Horn designers typically optimize
4、 one, two, or three performance parameters considered to be of the highest value, and then other areas of performance become an indirect result of the other choices made. Unfortunately each parameter mentioned influ- ences sound quality, arrayability, and accuracy. This in turn impacts the successfu
5、l application of a horn in a loudspeaker system. Focus on a limited subset of objective parameters may not yield an optimal performance balance for real world appli- cations. Since the human ear doesnt discriminate based on a single area of technical superiority, a balance of each area of performanc
6、e is required. 2 An Introduction to Progressive Transition Waveguides: PTTM Waveguide Design: To achieve balanced response of all parameters, JBL Professional started with a clean sheet of paper and developed Progressive Transition (PT) Waveguides. Progressive Transition waveguides are unique becaus
7、e a single mathematically-continuous surface defines the waveguide from transducer- throat to waveguide-mouth. Figures 1 through 4 show various PT waveguides. In each case the distinctive feature is the lack of a traditional diffrac- tion slot. Instead the sidewalls transition smoothly from the driv
8、er throat through to the square or rectangular mounting flange. Figure 3: PT-H1010HF wave-guide (100 x 100, 12 x 12 inch, rotatable). Figure 1: PT-H64HF waveguide (60 x 40, 12 x 12 inch, rotatable). Earlier designs consider the throat, the diffraction- slot, and the bell of the horn to be separate.
9、This produces a discontinuity at the diffraction slot, where a roughly exponential loading suddenly becomes a rapid final flare (or bell) intended to provide constant beamwidth. While this approach yields uniform beamwidth and DI, the downside is high distortion, rough electrical and acoustical impe
10、dance, and often irregular frequency re- sponse. These factors may combine to produce the typical “horn sound”. By applying advanced 3-dimensional surface modeling, it was possible to create a waveguide surface that eliminates the diffraction slot disconti- nuity. This allows the expanding acoustic
11、wave- front to remain perpendicular to, and attached to, the horn side-wall at all times. Figure 2: PT-F64HF waveguide (60 x 40, 6.5 x 12 inch). Figure 4: PT-K95MH waveguide (90 x 50, 18 x 18 inch, rotatable). 3 In a PT waveguide, the wave-front is controlled to generate the correct shape to propaga
12、te from the waveguides mouth. Even though geometrical diffraction is eliminated in PT designs, constant beamwidth and constant directivity are achieved. Improved frequency response, and lower distortion result. PT waveguide design principles are patent pending. PT Waveguide Performance Benefits: Smo
13、other frequency response. With JBLs 2451SL compression driver frequency response of 1.0 dB is realized, with minimal equaliza- tion, on many PT waveguides. Electrical Impedance is smoother, and is free of typical “high-Q” peaks that compromise passive crossover design, and indicate difficult throat
14、loading of the compression driver. Advanced constant beamwidth and directivity is achieved. Wide coverage angles are achieved without compromise. PT waveguides may be as wide as 120 x 120, but do not have rough frequency response, severe electrical and impedance anomalies, or poor acoustic loading.
15、Harmonic Distortion is minimized to allow the maximum SPL capability of the compression driver to be used to its full advantage without a harsh “horn sound”. A continuous transition from the transducer exit to the rectangular or square waveguide mouth ensures uniform projection in the intended cover
16、age area. Progressive Transition Waveguide Families: PT waveguides are grouped into two families. The first is “compact”, and second is “optimized cover- age/rotatable”. Compact PT waveguides balance performance in favor of small overall package size. Frequency response is optimal, distortion is sup
17、erbly low, depth is minimized for use where a shallow enclo- sure is required. Beamwidth and directivity are optimal in the horizontal plane. Vertical beamwidth and directivity are optimized to provide a good match with JBL low frequency and midrange transducers; however, vertical pattern control do
18、es not extend as low as optimized coverage PT waveguides. Figure 5 shows a compact PT waveguide. Systems with rotatable PT waveguides optimize pattern control both horizontally and vertically. Pattern control is extended to a lower frequency. The installer can easily configure the loudspeaker for ho
19、rizontal or vertical use. In systems using an optimized coverage PT waveguide, smooth frequency response, and the uniformity of off-axis coverage, and arrayability are all superior. A rotatable PT waveguide is shown in figure 6. Figure 5: PT-F95HF waveguide (90 x 50, 6.5 x 12 inch). Figure 6: PT-H95
20、HF waveguide (90 x 50, 12 x 12 inch, rotatable). 4 Compact vs. Optimized Coverage PT Waveguides: Each PT design is appropriate for a wide variety of applications: Compact PT waveguides offer these features: Minimized enclosure size. Optimized low distortion for maximum output. Maximum output and sup
21、erior intelligibility. Stage monitors, distributed systems, and small arrays are excellent applications. Optimized Coverage PT waveguides allow for: Rotatable systems: Horizontal or Vertical orientation. Extremely smooth frequency response at all playback levels. Predictable arrayability in engineer
22、ed loud- speaker systems. Superior uniform coverage in difficult acoustical environments. Improved intelligibility. PT Mid-High Rotatable Waveguides: Combination mid-high, rotatable waveguides are a part of the PT family. The midrange transducer is a JBL Cone Midrange Compression DriverTM (CMCD). Ea
23、ch CMCD design features a cone midrange transducer integrated with a phasing plug, and an optimal rear enclosure. Figure 7 is a section view of a CMCD transducer. CMCD midrange systems have extended band- width over a full decade. Either from 200Hz to 2 kHz, or from 350 Hz to 3.5 kHz, depending on t
24、he specific model. JBL Professional Technical Note, Volume 1, No. 30, describes CMCD midrange components, and evaluates the performance in detail. PT Waveguide Models: Descriptive model numbers have been assigned to each Progressive Transition waveguide. This allows different systems using the same
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