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Q. What do time response and phase response mean and how do they affect speaker performance? Why do THIEL speakers have sloped baffles?A. THIEL uses the trademark "Coherent Source" to describe the unique technical performance of our products. This phrase is descriptive of the time and phase coherence which gives THIEL products the unusual ability to accurately reproduce musical waveforms for extremely realistic, three-dimensional reproduction. The two factors of time and phase response are interrelated since phase shifts in the crossover network usually cause energy to be smeared in time by more than the time errors caused by the non-aligned drivers. However, it is still helpful to think about time and phase independently, especially since there are speakers that incorporate driver alignment but which are not phase coherent. While these factors alone do not guarantee a good sounding loudspeaker, if all other parameters are successfully addressed, time and phase coherence add a dimension of clarity and spatial realism that cannot be achieved by other means. Each musical sound is comprised of several different tones, or harmonics, each having its own amplitude, time and phase relationships with the others. To completely preserve the unique character of each sound, it is necessary to preserve all of this information. In other words, the loudspeaker's amplitude, time and phase response must all be accurate. Conventional speakers can potentially do a good job of preserving the amplitude relationships of music, but they fail at preserving time and phase relationships. |
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TIME COHERENCE Timing errors also cause the loss of much directional or imaging information. With most speakers, the only dependable clues you are given about the location of the sound are contained in the loudness of each speaker. If the left speaker is playing a given instrument louder than the right, then the sound of that instrument seems to be located closer to the left speaker. This is why the "sound stage" that most speakers produce exists only between the speakers. In contrast to this loudness type of imaging information, your ear/brain interprets real life sounds by using timing information to locate the position of a sound. In real life, your ear perceives a sound as coming from the left because your left ear hears it first. That it may also sound louder to your left ear is secondary. Your ear is set up for, and is much better at, determining location from time information rather than loudness information. THIEL incorporates two methods to achieve time coherence: positioning the speakers along a sloped baffle; and mounting drivers coaxially. |
Positioning Drivers Along A Sloped Baffle |
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In most speakers, the tweeter is closer to the listener's ear so the sound's upper harmonics are heard before the lower harmonics, significantly reducing realism
To eliminate this problem, the drivers in THIEL speakers are mounted on a sloped baffle to position them so the sound from each reaches the listener at the same time. This positioning accurately preserves the time information, giving the sound focus and allowing spatial detail to come through. |
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The second method THIEL uses to achieve time coherence is through the use of coaxially mounted drivers |
The CS6's coaxially mounted tweeter
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The THIEL models CS7.2, CS6, MCS1 and SCS3 use coaxially mounted drivers to achieve time coherence. This type of driver is perfectly time aligned since the sound sources of both drivers are in the same location, and therefore the outputs of both reach the listener at the same time.
The CS6's coaxial mounting of its tweeter and midrange drivers, shown on the left, is unique in that the midrange uses a specially shaped, three-layer diaphragm. This shallow design eliminates the frequency response errors of conventional designs, which are created by the horn loading effect of the midrange's diaphragm on the tweeter.
What is phase shift?Imagine holding a spring with a weight attached to its end. If you move your hand up and down very slowly, the weight will move up and down in perfect step, or synchrony. If you increase the speed (or frequency) of the up and down motion, the motion of the weight lags behind your hand's motionas your hand begins its movement down, the weight is still moving up. This lack of synchrony is called phase shift. |
| However difficult and expensive phase and time coherence are to achieve, THIEL believes that the sonic improvements are well worth the cost. By accurately preserving all of the information contained in a musical recording, THIEL speakers are able to accurately reproduce the space of the original recording environment. Instruments can easily be placed outside the speakers and there is no sense of the sound stage being limited or compressed by the speakers. Also, transient details are more focused and clearly delineated. Time and phase coherence provide a more natural and complete musical experience. |
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