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Edgar

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Everything posted by Edgar

  1. The denominator polynomial for a 3rd order Bessel filter is: s3 + 6s2 + 15s + 15 This can be decomposed into the cascade of a 2nd order section and a 1st order section: (s2 + 3.67781464537391s + 6.45943269348336)(s + 2.32218535462609) The 2nd order section has a Q of 0.69105, which is really close to the Q of a Butterworth filter (0.70711). So you could construct a very close approximation to a 3rd order Bessel filter as the cascade of a 2nd order Butterworth and a 1st order filter. You just need to figure out the cutoff frequencies for the constituent filters. Greg
  2. It's the same thing that makes people love Chevy over Ford, the Packers over the Bears, or Harley Davidson over other motorcycles: fanaticism.
  3. Pretty much any CAD program will create a DXF. I use TurboCAD and, frankly, don't even bother with DXF unless I need to transfer the drawing to another person. As for the design of the horn itself, a little mathematical knowledge plus Hornresp will get you started. Greg
  4. I've been through similar, only with FedEx. They admitted fault. I filled out all of the paperwork and jumped through all of the hoops. They still owe me $$ for their truck knocking over the basketball goal by my driveway, since 2008. It's just not worth my time to pursue it, and they know it.
  5. Having grown up in the St Louis area, and now just having moved back, this seems very typical to me for this time of the year. We've gotten much better at predicting and detecting storms than we were when I was young, but the storms themselves seem pretty much the same as they have always been.
  6. They said last night on The Weather Channel that the tornado sirens went off twenty minutes before the tornado hit. So many storms hit this area so often that it's easy to become complacent, to lose that sense of urgency. I do it myself. My sympathy goes out to the people who lost so much.
  7. My portable computer, which I only use for email and browsing, got that a week or so ago. I have no idea how it got in, for the computer was (supposedly) protected. The first time I ran antivirus software to eradicate it, it launched so many Windows utilities that the CPU usage went to 100% and the antivirus software ran at a snail's pace. Ultimately I ran several antivirus and antimalware programs (which took several days); each said that it had removed it but every time it returned when I rebooted. The only way I was able to remove it completely was to wipe the HD and do a clean install. This is a nasty one.
  8. From the "crude but effective, and very sturdy" department: stands. []
  9. Alas, I am currently "bikeless".
  10. If you mean tube shields, then about all they do is cause the tube to run hotter; see Fig. 6 in the first paper here.
  11. Tried hunting for a job lately? Same kind of situation.
  12. A while ago I saw a news bit that said that Bose was doing research on MR-based shock absorbers. Yes, THAT Bose. Believe it or not.
  13. That's why I listen to vacuum tubes. They'll never achieve self-awareness. They'll just sit in the corner of the room and glow warmly.
  14. I've seen them both ways, and I don't know when the change was made. The pair that I have does not have the center brace. Somewhere I have response graphs from the 9040 series, but I cannot locate them at the moment. I recall EV stating that they loaded down to around 300 Hz, with a recommended crossover at 500 Hz. But I also seem to recall some anomalies in the response between 500 and 700 Hz, leading me to conclude that 700 Hz might be a better choice. Mine are not in use at the moment, so I cannot comment beyond that. The 9040A is approximately the same width and depth as the K402; about 6" less in height. But that curved front makes it difficult to integrate into a cabinet of any reasonable shape. Greg
  15. Several years ago I shipped (commercially) a set of large speakers from Canada to the US. They had to go through Customs, but because the speakers had been made in the USA, the process was streamlined considerably by NAFTA. Seriously, it went from a 1" thick stack of paperwork to a single signature. In my travels, I have found it to be MUCH more difficult to cross back into the US than to cross into Canada, despite the fact that I am a US citizen. I can't imagine how difficult it might get if they suspect you of carrying contraband. I strongly urge you to follow the rules on this. Don't try to take any short cuts. The stakes are too high and the consequences too dire. Greg
  16. Yes it can, but you have to hit it really hard. (Yes, I know it's in poor taste, but it's a joke, okay? I couldn't resist a straight line like that.)
  17. Has anybody seen anything that says what processor they're using? From context it looks like a DSP563xx, but nothing in the data sheet or manual says so explicitly. Now if it just had digital I/O ... Greg
  18. I want to clarify something that I wrote earlier about the gain-ranging ADCs. Back in the late 1990s, when I was comparing the KT gain-ranging ADCs with the newer single-range ADCs, those KT converters were among their premium products. We are not talking about bad-sounding converters, by any means. We are talking about the difference between 99.98% and 99.99% -- the gain-ranging was only audible with extremely critical listening tests, and many people could not hear it at all. So if you're concerned that the DX38 converters sound bad, don't be. Greg
  19. A model can only crudely account for the infinite number of variables that affect the response. That's why it's best to compare models with themselves ("How did the model response change when I altered a parameter?"), rather than trying to compare them with reality. Greg
  20. Well, modeling shows that it's a bad idea. According to Hornresp, the cutoff frequency rises a bit,and the midrange response gets ugly. Standard Jubilee in gray, modified in black. Greg
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