I recently completed a set of Lil Joker satellite speakers which are based around a Dayton Audio Coaxial speaker. They sound pretty good, but while making gated measurements (pseudo-anechoic) I couldn't help but notice some prominent comb filtering caused by baffle edge diffraction and more.
Here's a photo of the face of the baffle with dimensions written over it:
As you can see, the driver is positioned on the center width, but offset on the height dimension. There is also a small flare on the tweeter which extends from the edge of the dome's voice coil by about 1/4" all around. The edges of the baffle are rounded over with a 1/4" router bit to give the look a softer edge and to reduce the impact of edge diffraction.
Still, below a certain frequency there will be edge diffraction as any sound which travels along the face of the baffle (90 degree, or perpendicular, to the driver) will be create diffraction with it encounters the edge.
Using real world measurements, I am able to show the impact of this effect in real life.
I took a frequency response measurement about 19" from the speaker directly on axis then at 7.5 degree off axis until I reached 90 degrees, or directly to the side. All of those charts are shown below from 500Hz to 20,000Hz.
I normalized all of the responses to the directly forward, 0 degree, on axis measurement so each subsequent measurement shows how the response changes from the direct response. As the mic moves to the side, the distance from one side edge gets shorter and the distance from the other side edge gets farther away. This demonstrates how the edge diffraction changes the comb-filtering frequencies as the mic moves off center.
Below about 1,600Hz the diffraction is at it's maximum as the rounding over has no impact on the diffraction. However, in the octave above that. about 1,600Hz to about 3,200Hz, the amplitude of the diffracted audio gets softer from the rounding over of the edge until it completely goes away above 3,200Hz and the response is smooth. This is also the range where the directionality of the tweeter's output is narrowed because of midrange cone acting as a wave guide to it. However, above about 11,000Hz you can start to see diffraction artifacts again from the little wave guide flare on the tweeter itself inside the woofer.
This effect can also be demonstrated with the Polar Plot of the same frequency response data in the above chart:
The most red areas are the loudest and the blue to black areas are where the least about of sound is arriving at that angle and frequency.
You can clearly see the clear bands of energy below about 1,600Hz in highly separated red vertical bands. Then above 1,600Hz those bands get more blended and less defined until at about 3,200Hz where the orange/red area is smooth with not clear delineation. However, starting just above 10,000Hz you can again see some definition of banding.
This is all what happens when you have edge diffraction on a speaker, and in this case I made at least some effort to reduce it.
What does this mean to the sound?
The impact is rarely an audio frequency response issue, but instead all that comb-filtering is caused by delayed acoustic reflections off the edge of the baffle which arrive at your ears milliseconds after the original sound. Your brain has no ability to interpret such closely following reflections as "echo" or "ambience" and instead assumes all of that energy is the source signal. That makes the signal more "smeared" or lacking some detail in a way which is very hard to put your finger on.
Many often talk about the incredible resolution they hear from good headphones, and this is one reason for that. With very good headphones there are no early reflections like this to muddy up the sound, so you get a more accurate acoustic representation of what is on the source signal than when a speaker introduces diffraction.
Add other early reflections in an untreated room, and you get even more cluttering up of the original signal to make it less refined, clear, resolved or detailed.
Here's a photo of the face of the baffle with dimensions written over it:
As you can see, the driver is positioned on the center width, but offset on the height dimension. There is also a small flare on the tweeter which extends from the edge of the dome's voice coil by about 1/4" all around. The edges of the baffle are rounded over with a 1/4" router bit to give the look a softer edge and to reduce the impact of edge diffraction.
Still, below a certain frequency there will be edge diffraction as any sound which travels along the face of the baffle (90 degree, or perpendicular, to the driver) will be create diffraction with it encounters the edge.
Using real world measurements, I am able to show the impact of this effect in real life.
I took a frequency response measurement about 19" from the speaker directly on axis then at 7.5 degree off axis until I reached 90 degrees, or directly to the side. All of those charts are shown below from 500Hz to 20,000Hz.
I normalized all of the responses to the directly forward, 0 degree, on axis measurement so each subsequent measurement shows how the response changes from the direct response. As the mic moves to the side, the distance from one side edge gets shorter and the distance from the other side edge gets farther away. This demonstrates how the edge diffraction changes the comb-filtering frequencies as the mic moves off center.
Below about 1,600Hz the diffraction is at it's maximum as the rounding over has no impact on the diffraction. However, in the octave above that. about 1,600Hz to about 3,200Hz, the amplitude of the diffracted audio gets softer from the rounding over of the edge until it completely goes away above 3,200Hz and the response is smooth. This is also the range where the directionality of the tweeter's output is narrowed because of midrange cone acting as a wave guide to it. However, above about 11,000Hz you can start to see diffraction artifacts again from the little wave guide flare on the tweeter itself inside the woofer.
This effect can also be demonstrated with the Polar Plot of the same frequency response data in the above chart:
The most red areas are the loudest and the blue to black areas are where the least about of sound is arriving at that angle and frequency.
You can clearly see the clear bands of energy below about 1,600Hz in highly separated red vertical bands. Then above 1,600Hz those bands get more blended and less defined until at about 3,200Hz where the orange/red area is smooth with not clear delineation. However, starting just above 10,000Hz you can again see some definition of banding.
This is all what happens when you have edge diffraction on a speaker, and in this case I made at least some effort to reduce it.
What does this mean to the sound?
The impact is rarely an audio frequency response issue, but instead all that comb-filtering is caused by delayed acoustic reflections off the edge of the baffle which arrive at your ears milliseconds after the original sound. Your brain has no ability to interpret such closely following reflections as "echo" or "ambience" and instead assumes all of that energy is the source signal. That makes the signal more "smeared" or lacking some detail in a way which is very hard to put your finger on.
Many often talk about the incredible resolution they hear from good headphones, and this is one reason for that. With very good headphones there are no early reflections like this to muddy up the sound, so you get a more accurate acoustic representation of what is on the source signal than when a speaker introduces diffraction.
Add other early reflections in an untreated room, and you get even more cluttering up of the original signal to make it less refined, clear, resolved or detailed.