2.5: POWER AMPLIFIERS
The power amplifier should be reasonably well matched in power to the power rating of the speakers (see specifications). The use of a powerful amplifier (i.e. in excess of the recommended figure) provides headroom, which is useful especially for highly dynamic programme materials.
Due of the high peak power handling of Tannoy monitors, responsible use of even more powerful amplifiers should not represent a danger to the speakers if the amplifiers are not overdriven. Now, just because you have a Ferrari, it doesn't mean to say you can drive it at the red line all of the time, it will eventually blow up. Same thing goes here, just because the speakers will handle a large amplifier, it doesn't mean that you can run them flat out constantly without eventually blowing something up.
3.0: PLACEMENT OF THE SPEAKERS
Now here's the truly critical stuff. Speaker placement and the listening environment can completely compromise the performance of any loudspeaker, no matter how much it costs. It is important to understand some limitations of
3.1: ORIENTATION
All two way component systems have to live with some listening position dependent compromises at the crossover point. The crossover frequency of all of these small systems falls into the center of the midband (2.0kHz to 3.0kHz), where we are most capable of recognising frequency/phase response deviations.
In the diagrams below we have a graphical representation of the speaker systems operating at the crossover point where both high and low frequency drivers produce the same output level. The first one shows a pair of
HORIZONTAL
Stereo occurs from left to right, so that is the listening plane in which we try to minimise the changes in physical/time offset between the woofers and tweeters. And we have to be honest, it's not perfect, the driver offset is still there, but by stacking the woofer and tweeter vertically on the baffle we can give the mix engineer the widest range of movement in the horizontal plane. You can roll your chair across the length of your mixing console and not change the relationship between the woofer and tweeter (just don't bob your head up and down while you do it).
VERTICAL
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