Community

AES Convention Papers Forum

Time-Alignment of Multi-Way Speakers with Group Delay Equalization - I

Document Thumbnail

In this paper, a first of two-parts, a technique for time-aligning the driver responses (viz., woofer, mid-range, and tweeter responses) in a multi-way speaker system is presented. Generally, woofers exhibit a much larger time-of-arrival delay, at a listening position, compared to the mid-range and high-frequency drivers. Moreover, the time-of-arrival delay for all drivers is frequency dependent exhibiting a large variation over the audible frequency domain. Due to these differences, a two-part study was undertaken to understand the effects of these variations, quantitatively and qualitatively. In this first part, we present the motivation behind the system used for applying all-pass filters to process audio signals being delivered to the multi-way speaker and propose a time-delay difference equalization technique. We show that applying all-pass filters result in significant ``temporal-smearing' of the response, despite flattening of the group delay response. Thus depending on the amount of group-delay equalization, the smearing with pre-ring effects could potentially have audible effects depending on the content. However, despite the temporal-smearing (viz., response-dilation in time) for an arbitrary-order all-pass filter, we show that the time-frequency characteristics of these group-delay equalizing filters exhibit a uniform decay rate at all-frequencies allowing group-delay equalization without affecting the modal decay rates. Thus this enables other cascaded filter structures to be utilized for modal equalization in additional to conventional loudspeaker-room equalizers. We also propose group-delay flattening for the woofer and a small range of the midrange frequencies through a weighted approach at the lower frequencies for group-delay equalization. Future work will involve investigations using perceptually motivated variable-octave complex smoothing of responses (1/24-th octave smoothing at low frequencies and 1/3-rd octave at higher frequencies), and designing all-pass filters based on this phase-smoothed data. Quantitative results obtained will be presented in this paper, whereas the next part of the two-part paper will present results from listening tests.

Authors:
Affiliation:
AES Convention: Paper Number:
Publication Date:
Subject:

Click to purchase paper as a non-member or you can login as an AES member to see more options.

No AES members have commented on this paper yet.

Subscribe to this discussion

RSS Feed To be notified of new comments on this paper you can subscribe to this RSS feed. Forum users should login to see additional options.

Start a discussion!

If you would like to start a discussion about this paper and are an AES member then you can login here:
Username:
Password:

If you are not yet an AES member and have something important to say about this paper then we urge you to join the AES today and make your voice heard. You can join online today by clicking here.

AES - Audio Engineering Society