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Rane AC 22B (1998 version) User Manual

Page 10

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Manual-10

Delay vs. Frequency Table

If you do not have the equipment necessary to electroni-

cally align the system as described in the previous sections,
you may use the table below to obtain a rough and approxi-
mate
phase alignment of your drivers. Measure the horizontal
displacement between the voice coils of the two adjacent
drivers sharing the same crossover point, then find the
column in the table nearest your actual displacement. Move
down this column to the proper Crossover Frequency as
indicated on the left of the table: the corresponding DELAY
knob setting will then be the closest for your system. For
example, if you have a two-way system crossed over at 800
Hz with the compression driver voice coil located about 9"
behind the woofer voice coil, the Delay knob setting corre-
sponding to a 9" displacement at 800 Hz on the table would
be “5” as indicated on the front panel.

In order to phase-align two drivers you must observe only

the crossover frequency, which is common to both drivers.
Pink noise can be used if all other frequencies are disre-
garded, since room acoustics and imperfect driver response
will cause erroneous alignment attempts. Using pink noise as
a source, each driver is individually tuned to an arbitrary 0
dB level on the analyzer display only at the crossover
frequency
. When both are turned on simultaneously, the
combined response of the two drivers should read +3 dB
higher at the crossover frequency on the display. If the drivers
are not phase-aligned, some cancellation will occur on-axis,
resulting in a combined response less than +3 dB. Turning up
the DELAY control causes the lower driver to electronically
move backward until the analyzer reads +3 dB; then the two
drivers are electronically aligned and the on-axis cancellation
is eliminated (see Figure 2 on page Manual-6).

Voice Coil Displacement (Inches)

(Hz)

.75"

1.5"

3"

6"

9"

12"

15"

18"

21"

24"

70

1

1.5

2

2.5

3.5

5

6

7

8

MAX

80

1

1.5

2

2.5

3.5

5

6

7

8

MAX

100

1

1.5

2

2.5

3.5

5

6

7

8

MAX

150

1

1.5

2

2.5

3.5

5

6

7

MAX

200

1

1.5

2

2.5

3.5

5

6

7

MAX

250

1

1.5

2

2.5

3.5

5

7

8

MAX

300

1

1.5

2

2.5

3.5

5.5

7

MAX

400

1

1.5

2

2.5

4

6

8

MAX

450

1

1.5

2

2.5

4

6

8

MAX

500

1

1.5

2

2.5

4

6

8

MAX

800

1

1.5

2

3

5

7

MAX

lk

1

1.5

2.2

3

6

MAX

1.2k

1

1.5

2.2

3.5

MAX

1.5k

1

1.5

2.3

3.5

MAX

2k

1

1.5

2.3

MAX

2.5k

1

1.5

2.3

MAX

3k

1

1.7

2.4

MAX

3.6k

1

1.7

MAX

4k

1

1.8

MAX

6k

1

2

MAX

7k

1.2

MAX

Crossover Frequency

Displacement

Fig. 3. Vertical Driver Displacement