PeterF wrote:Chuck, can you please tell us by what means you are measuring and plotting frequency response? It's a super interesting pursuit and surprising (to me, at least) that it hasn't been done more thoroughly on our old phonographs.
Do you measure via direct electrical connection to the outputs, or via microphone to also account for the characteristics of the original old speakers? And if by mic, how do you factor in the mic's characteristics?
There's a guy, John Levin, who has spent a bundle of money creating a special cylinder player. Very hi tech, and an awesome achievement. I saw and heard it at the CAPS meet in LA last summer. He made frequency response claims for it that were certainly held up by the demos, but upon asking directly we learned that those numbers were calculated, not measured. And even more frustrating, he only had an estimated high end number but nothing for low frequencies.
He's going to give his presentation at Union this year. It would be great if you guys could somehow connect and find a way to extract real performance numbers for his extraordinary system, unless he's already managed to do so in the meantime.
The plots that I have done are just the amplifier, from pickup input connection to speaker voice coil output connection. Lately I have been using an HP 35665A Dynamic Signal Analyzer which has built in source to generate a sweep response from 51.2Hz to 51.2KHz. Earlier I had done them manually using a signal generator and an AC voltmeter to plot data points.
Testing end to end gets a bit more complicated, on the output side you need a calibrated microphone and preferably a sound dead room, on the input side you need a source to drive the pickup. One method would require test records that would output a series of known tones and levels within the band of interest and use the real time ⅓ or 1/12 octave measurement mode of the analyzer to measure the output levels. Another might be a transducer that could be coupled to the pickup to drive the armature mechanically through the frequencies of interest.
I have played with the real time octave analyzer connected to the pickup to see what information was actually being output from the record/pickup combination, not easy to measure but I could see there wasn't much information above 5KHz just appeared to be noise. At some point I would like to try playing a record with a modern pickup with a known frequency response and be able to isolate what's recorded on the record from the limitations of the early pickup response.
Sound is very subjective, what sounds good to me, may sound bad to someone else. Numbers are good, but just because I measure a THD of an amplifier to be .05% doesn't mean it is going to sound the same (read good) to all listeners, because of where and which distortion products are generated in the output sound.
BTW, most of my testing has been on electric pickups and phonos.
Lot's of stuff to try, not much time to do it all.
Chuck