Meyer Sound 100 Manual Do Utilizador

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CHAPTER 4: INTEGRATING ACHERON LF LOUDSPEAKERS
20
GALILEO LOUDSPEAKER MANAGEMENT 
SYSTEM
The Galileo
®
 loudspeaker management system was 
designed by Meyer Sound as a comprehensive solution for 
driving and aligning loudspeakers, especially those com-
prised of its self-powered loudspeakers. A range of Galileo 
systems are available, depending on the needs of system, 
with each including hardware processors with low-latency 
outputs and processing that includes gain, polarity, delay, 
low- and high-pass filters, and equalization (parametric and 
TruShaping). The Galileo processors can be controlled from 
the extensive Compass™ software running on a Windows or 
Mac
®
 computer. The Galileo system also interfaces seam-
lessly with Meyer Sound’s SIM
®
 3 audio analyzer.
USING DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSORS AND 
CROSSOVERS WITH ACHERON SYSTEMS
Full-range signals can be connected directly to Meyer 
Sound self-powered loudspeakers because they have built-
in active crossovers. External crossovers and digital signal 
processors are optional and should be used with caution as 
they can introduce phase shifts that cause destructive can-
cellations.
If a digital signal processor is used to drive an Acheron LCR 
system, the Acherons and Acheron LFs should be driven 
from the same processor to keep their delay times the same. 
Otherwise a phase shift between the loudspeakers may be 
encountered. In addition, you should verify the delay time 
between channels: some digital signal processors may incur 
channel-to-channel delays when the processor is near max-
imum throughput, which becomes more likely as the number 
of filters in use by the processor is increased.
In no case should a filter higher than the 2nd order be used 
on source signals. The additional phase shift introduced by 
these filters deteriorates the impulse response, and the 
higher roll-off does not improve crossover interaction.
If loudspeakers will be driven directly from a digital signal 
processor, make sure the signal is sufficient to drive the total 
load impedance of the connected loudspeakers (see “Loop 
Output Connector” on page 15).
TIP: 
To address the collective concerns of sys-
tem design verification, subwoofer integration, 
digital signal processors, delay systems, and acousti-
cal conditions, a measurement system like Meyer 
Sound’s SIM 3 is strongly recommended.