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In Reply to: RE: The Pros and Cons of Horn Speakers posted by morricab on August 28, 2024 at 01:35:18
No - I said that horn speakers are less adversely affected by room features than any other type of speaker.
Their directional projection of sound means less reflected sounds from walls, ceiling, etc. They are less likely to benefit from DSP than other types in poorly treated rooms - for the same fundamental reason. I hope this clarifies my earlier post.
Follow Ups:
Line sources are less affected by the room than any other type of speaker, as the restricted vertical directivity reduces early reflections off the floor and ceiling, while horizontal dispersion is unaffected. Line sources may be either direct radiating or horn loaded. As for the directional projection of horns, that may be configured narrower than a direct radiator, but it doesn't have to be narrower than a direct radiator. CD horns, for example.
In reality, the least room involvement is from the greatest directivity and a large horn can have a much greater "front to back" ratio than a large array.
A large bass line array in fact can radiate as much to the rear as the front, a curved array can radiate more to the sides than forward in spite of the mythology.
The issue in large scale sound has been how to make a large enough horn and full range.
Yes. You have "been there, done that," Tom.s. Anyone who ever hears your products is convinced in about 3 seconds flat. The rest are mostly bovine sediment.
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