Markaudio CHR70A Fullrange Driver

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  • čas přidán 23. 08. 2024
  • In this video I would like to feature the Markaudio CHR70A fullrange driver. This driver was sent to me by my customer. The drivers are relatively affordable at only $26 USD each.
    Original blog post: josephcrowe.co...
    Drivers at Madisoud: www.madisounds...
    Product Page: www.markaudio....
    Contact Page: josephcrowe.co....
    Store josephcrowe.com/
    Legacy Blog Page: croweaudio.blog...
    Facebook: / josephcrowediy
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    Email: joseph_crowe@josephcrowe.com
    Troy Joseph Crowe is a small business located in Canada. He offers custom audio products such as wood horns and speaker cabinet design. He provides services to either individuals, small businesses, or start-ups. All of his designs are available for personal use in the form of 3D CAD files or CNC G-Code. If using for commercial use then licensing may be required for certain technologies. Joseph Crowe has a background in Mechanical Engineering Technology with extensive experience in both the Audio Industry and the Automotive Industry. All design work is done using SolidWorks 3D CAD modeling software. His focus is on audiophile two-channel music systems for the most accurate sound reproduction.

Komentáře • 20

  • @MrSemperfidelis225
    @MrSemperfidelis225 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Nice review, thanks. Not the same but I have the MarkAudio Alpair7 in an oversize ported cab in my apt where I cannot play loud at all. For the levels I can play I find them extremely enjoyable and musical. So for situations where it is not possible to play loud the tiny fullrange drivers from Mark Audio are great.

  • @joppepeelen
    @joppepeelen Před rokem +2

    Nice one, used them yaaaers ago, pretty nice budget speaker, that also looks great. and well fullrange does have its charms. high SPL is not one of them :) but still enjoyable ! nivce review !!!

  • @omarfortinmartinez
    @omarfortinmartinez Před rokem +2

    Joseph, thanks for this video, lots of good info ...one question, the manufacturer recommends 100 hours of low volume music to loosen up the suspension, people say that this "smooths" the response of the speaker. This results are right out of the box or after the 100 hours?. Maybe if not is a good opportunity to make a comparison with the before and after measurements and that way we can see what it does, i hope you can consider, cheers

  • @WindyM
    @WindyM Před rokem +4

    I would guess that the 1.6kHz issues are attributable to a surround resonance.

  • @litzy7892
    @litzy7892 Před rokem +1

    I wonder if they have a four incher. Off to their website I goooo!

  • @chebananton
    @chebananton Před rokem +1

    Спасибо! Супер!

  • @jericlee1509
    @jericlee1509 Před rokem +1

    what is best speaker top 1 and top 2 for you?

  • @jked7463
    @jked7463 Před rokem

    Regarding the cymbals, could it be that you are hearing the aluminum material of the drivers and that was incompatible with reproducing brass cymbals? Also, that terrible breakup above 10 K can't help but change the sound of the cymbals. Sounds like a decent midrange that can be rolled off (steeply) to good tweeter (ribbon or amt?) At 5-6k. The small size can allow a very narrow front baffle and a small format tweeter could get close to coupling at the crossover. .

  • @Matrix...777
    @Matrix...777 Před rokem +1

    Can you compare Markaudio with Visaton B80 ?

  • @BostonMike68
    @BostonMike68 Před rokem

    I was thinking of making a design similar to what you made and using the Mark audio replacing a need for a tweeter but what you said about the simbels has second guessing my idea. Do you think I will be better off just sticking with a tweeter?

  • @rhalfik
    @rhalfik Před rokem

    Excellent review! Would you recommend this driver as a midrange driver in a 3 way?

  • @MrAlexandreazevedo
    @MrAlexandreazevedo Před rokem

    Nice review. Do you think that these MarkAudio full-range speakers are adequate to be used as a single full-range driver in a speaker cabinet and combined with an external active subwoofer that can reproduce bass down to 20Hz? Would that 2.1 setup with MarkAudio full-range speakers be a better HIFI than using a 3-way normal speaker system with the subwoofer?

    • @JosephCrowesDIYSpeakerBuilding
      @JosephCrowesDIYSpeakerBuilding  Před rokem +3

      It’s a good solution in this price and size category. Outside of that then there are certainly much better sounding alternatives. Your proposed subwoofer idea doesn’t resolve the mid-bass issue (80Hz-300Hz region). A woofer that operates from 35Hz to 300Hz cleanly would be a better solution. You can still add subwoofers to cover the low bass. Adding a super tweeter above 8kHz is a good idea too. That way you can have a single driver covering the vocal range at least. Is this better than just building a dedicate 3-way? I think so. Most 3-ways have the crossover points at 600Hz and 5kHz, which is too far into the vocal region.

    • @MrAlexandreazevedo
      @MrAlexandreazevedo Před rokem

      ​@@JosephCrowesDIYSpeakerBuilding thanks for your suggestion I find it interesting. I don't have experience with crossover and speaker design but I would like to DIY a speaker project and was thinking that a full range would be easier.
      Currently, I have a pair of Technics SB-EX3 speakers from the 90s that has a frequency response of 33Hz to 45kHz and a new Yamaha NS-SW300 Active Subwoofer that goes down up to 20Hz, the sound is good but would like to build something that could improve, maybe replacing the speakers with a good full range would not improve the sound but probably adding a super tweeter above 8kHz as you say is a good idea.

  • @mkshffr4936
    @mkshffr4936 Před rokem

    I have the original version and they sound very nice though rather low efficiency.

  • @Sparta155
    @Sparta155 Před rokem

    Thanks Joseph. What would you say are the technical characteristics needed for a speaker to reproduce accurate sounding cymbals?

    • @JosephCrowesDIYSpeakerBuilding
      @JosephCrowesDIYSpeakerBuilding  Před rokem +2

      That's a good question. TBH I'm not entirely sure. But if you are looking for the best possible chance of replicating percussion then medium to large scale horn speakers are the way to go.

  • @NackDSP
    @NackDSP Před rokem

    Don't waste your time or money on these midrange drivers pretending to be "full range".. Expensive for the tiny Xmax. To get any bass a large vented resonant enclosure for horrible transient bass response or a huge long transmission line enclosure that will cost way more than just buying a nice larger Xmax coaxial driver and putting it in a nice smaller box. The high frequencies will come out in a narrow beam and the upper mids and highs will be punctuated by cone resonances and breakup modes. So simple jazz with a single voice, bass and drums will work fine. These are a total disaster trying to reproduce a choir or complex music or when you want to distinguish between instruments. These are vanity drivers built to look really nice for the DIY crowd, that can't design a crossover network. Not good performers. Adding a woofer and a tweeter and you will have a good speaker.