Jeg ønsker å beholde og optimalisere omgivelsene for disse høyttalerne fremover innenfor rimelige grenser.Øker baffle-step med størrelsen på frontplaten (baffelen) lineært på høyttalere? På hvilken måte påvirker dette lydbildet typisk?
Leste meg opp for mine høyttalere og fikk frem dette:
Revel M126Be Overview
The Revel PerformaBe M126Be is a premium 2-way bookshelf speaker with a 6.5-inch aluminum mid/woofer and 1-inch beryllium tweeter in a waveguide, rear-ported design. Its nominal sensitivity is 86 dB/1W/1m, impedance is 8 ohms (minimum 3.7 ohms), and published frequency response is 54 Hz–44 kHz (±3 dB). It uses a 4th-order crossover with high-quality components (film capacitors, air-core inductors) optimized for low distortion and wide dispersion.
Does It Have High Baffle Step?
No, the Revel M126Be does not have high (uncompensated) baffle step. Revel's design incorporates baffle step compensation in the crossover network, resulting in a flat, balanced overall frequency response. This is evident from independent measurements across multiple reviews:
- On-Axis Response: Smooth and flat from ~300 Hz upward, with a minor dip (~2–3 dB) around 50–70 Hz due to port tuning and enclosure limits (rolls off sharply below 54 Hz). No rising trend toward bass, indicating compensation prevents excess low-end buildup.
 - Off-Axis and Dispersion: Excellent directivity control thanks to the waveguide; horizontal dispersion is 60–70° wide up to 10 kHz, with a slight narrowing above. Vertical response shows a small dip near the 1.7 kHz crossover, but no baffle-step-related flare.
 - Sound Power and Predicted In-Room Response (PIR): These aggregate measurements (weighting listening window ~12%, early reflections ~44%, and sound power ~44%) are notably flat, with minimal deviation (<3 dB) from 100 Hz–10 kHz. A compensated design targets this flatness; uncompensated speakers show a 4–6 dB rise in bass/mids on PIR.
 - Crossover and Diffraction Notes: The high-order crossover minimizes lobing, and the curved cabinet edges reduce edge diffraction (a contributor to baffle step). Reviews praise the neutral, uncolored sound, with no mentions of boomy bass or imbalance—hallmarks of uncompensated high baffle step.
 
								
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