MartinLogan ElectroMotion® ESL X Manuale Proprietario

Pagina di 31
15
CONTROLLED HORIZONTAL DISPERSION 
Your EM-ESL X’s launch a 30 degree horizontal 
dispersion pattern. This horizontal dispersion field 
gives a choice of good seats for the performance 
while minimizing interactions with side walls (see 
figure 13). Make sure both speakers stand exactly 
at the same vertical angle, otherwise the image 
can be skewed or poorly defined. The wave 
launch of both speakers is extremely accurate in 
both the time and spectral domain. Consequently, 
small refined adjustments can result in noticeable 
sonic improvements.
 
CONTROLLED VERTICAL DISPERSION
As you can see from the illustrations, your EM-ESL 
X
 speakers project a controlled dispersion pattern 
(see figure 14). Each EM-ESL X is a 34 inch line 
source. This vertical dispersion profile minimizes 
interactions with the floor and the ceiling.
THREE MAJOR TYPES OF DISPERSION
It is a known fact that as the sound wave becomes 
progressively smaller than the transducer producing 
it, the dispersion of that wave becomes more and 
more narrow, or directional. This fact occurs as 
long as the transducer is a flat surface. Large flat 
panel speakers exhibit venetian blind effects due 
to this phenomenon. This is one reason why many 
manufacturers opt for small drivers (i.e. tweeters 
and midrange) to approximate what is known as a 
point source wave launch.
Historically, most attempts to achieve smooth dis-
persion from large flat panel transducers resulted 
in trade-offs. After exhaustive testing of many differ-
ent methods, we conceived an elegantly simple, yet 
intensely hand crafted process. By curving the radiat-
ing surface, we create the effect of a horizontal arc. 
This allows the engineers at MartinLogan to control the 
high frequency dispersion pattern of our transducers.
D
ISPERSION
 I
NTERACTIONS
Figure 9–10. As can be seen here, 
point source concepts invite a great 
deal of room interaction. While deliv-
ering good frequency response to a 
large listening audience, imaging is 
consequently confused and blurred.
Figure 11–12. Even though they 
suffer from “venetian blind” effect, 
angled multiple panel speakers can 
deliver good imaging, but only to 
specific spots in the listening area.
Figure 13–14. A controlled 30 
degree cylindrical wave-front, a 
MartinLogan exclusive, offers optimal 
sound distribution with minimal room 
interaction. The result is solid imaging 
with a wide listening area.