I have not directly compared these two drivers, but I have a pair of 1772's that I've been playing with for a while now. They currently live in a 40L ported MDF enclosure. I am trying to decide on a final build as either a 24" tall speaker on a stand, or a floor standing design ala Bob Brines...
The TB 1772 speakers certainly do not exhibit rolled off treble. They have quite the opposite - a rising treble with frequency response. Fortunately, this is pretty easy to correct.
I've attached some images, all are measured frequency response of my 1772's in a 40L ported box that is up against the wall in a small room (12ft by 14ft). The first image is the raw response of the driver/box combination with no crossover. The second shows a comparison between my crossover (0.56mH inductor in parallel with a 15R resistor) and the crossover that Bob Brines designed for this speaker. The primary difference is the correction Bob adds to the 10kHz+ region. I happen to like the slight rise in response at the treble end and my network is more simple. If you want to bring the treble response down a bit more, change 15R to 20R (see last image). Measurements were taken on-axis about 4 feet away from the speaker and the graphs show 1/3 octave smoothing (cleans up the jaggies a little). If you move off axis, treble response diminishes a bit (like most other speakers). I wouldn't read too much into the the big peak and dip below 200Hz - these are likely due to the physical configuration of the room. Also, don't go comparing absolute dB level output across graphs as these were made at different points in time with different volume levels. The point is to compare the general shape of the response plots.
There are a number of designs for this driver published online. Here is one design for a smaller speaker (0.75 cu ft):
http://www.transcendentsound.com/Small_Tang_Band.html There was another design published on this same web site for a 3 cu ft floor stander that now seems to be gone. The details of the larger cabinet are: cabinet volume of 3 cubic feet (85L). External dimensions 37.5" tall, by 15.5" wide, by 11.75" deep. The walls are 3/4" thick plywood and the vent centerline is 8 inches off of the bottom. The vent is 4" diameter and 4" long. There are two window braces in the cabinet for reinforcement.
The L-Pad approach is a great way to experiment with the treble level. I built mine this way, listened for a few days, made minor adjustments, listened some more, adjusted some more... They produce plenty of bass, and if you're a purist, you'll probably be fine with these speakers on their own. I like a bit of kick from my bass, so I run these with my DIY sub.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2017, 04:24:44 AM by EricS »
Eric
Haven't electrocuted myself yet...
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