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  2. Audio crossover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_crossover

    There is a class of crossover filters that produce null responses in the high-pass and low-pass outputs at frequencies close to the crossover frequency. Within their respective stopbands, the outputs have a high initial rate of attenuation, while the sum of their outputs has a flat all-pass response.

  3. Loudspeaker time alignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudspeaker_time_alignment

    This particular crossover has the property that at the crossover frequency the electrical summing is flat (i.e., there is no peak or dip) and the signals being sent to the woofer and tweeter are always in phase (180° out of phase in the LR2 case, which is corrected by simply inverting the tweeter's signal).

  4. Bi-amping and tri-amping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bi-amping_and_tri-amping

    Bi-amping - An active crossover with two amplifiers.. Bi-amping and tri-amping is the practice of using two or three audio amplifiers respectively to amplify different audio frequency ranges, with the amplified signals being routed to different speaker drivers, such as woofers, subwoofers and tweeters.

  5. Midwoofer-tweeter-midwoofer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midwoofer-tweeter-midwoofer

    The midwoofer-tweeter-midwoofer loudspeaker configuration (called MTM, for short) was a design arrangement from the late 1960s that suffered from serious lobing issues that prevented its popularity until it was perfected by Joseph D'Appolito as a way of correcting the inherent lobe tilting of a typical mid-tweeter (MT) configuration, at the crossover frequency, unless time-aligned. [1]

  6. Linkwitz–Riley filter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linkwitz–Riley_filter

    This is the biggest advantage of L-R crossovers compared to even-order Butterworth crossovers, whose summed output has a +3 dB peak around the crossover frequency. Since cascading two n th -order Butterworth filters will give a (2 n ) th -order Linkwitz–Riley filter, theoretically any (2 n ) th -order Linkwitz–Riley crossover can be designed.

  7. Bass management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_management

    In the diagram, a 60 Hz crossover frequency has been illustrated, but this can typically vary between 40 and 80 Hz. The LFE channel is a separate channel that contains low frequencies only, and it was originally added to magnetic 70mm-movie soundtracks in the 1970s, to be reproduced through subwoofers. [5]

  8. Acoustic lobing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_lobing

    Acoustic lobing refers to the radiation pattern of a combination of two or more loudspeaker drivers at a certain frequency, as seen looking at the speaker from its side.In most multi-way speakers, it is at the crossover frequency that the effects of lobing are of greatest concern, since this determines how well the speaker preserves the tonality of the original recorded content.

  9. Cutoff frequency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cutoff_frequency

    The cutoff frequency is the critical frequency between propagation and attenuation, which corresponds to the frequency at which the longitudinal wavenumber is zero. It is given by ω c = c ( n π a ) 2 + ( m π b ) 2 {\displaystyle \omega _{c}=c{\sqrt {\left({\frac {n\pi }{a}}\right)^{2}+\left({\frac {m\pi }{b}}\right)^{2}}}} The wave equations ...