Test Bench: Beyma’s New 1” CD1ND Compact Polyimide Diaphragm Compression Driver and TD-194 Horn

July 28 2022, 14:10
The transducer I characterized here comes from Pro Sound OEM Acustica Beyma, a well-established 53-year-old company. Beyma was founded in 1969 and is headquartered in Valencia, Spain, with offices on five continents. Before I discuss the testing, I have to say that I admire Beyma’s environmental stance as a corporation. In 2007 the company installed a large array of solar panels, and runs the majority of its facility from solar-generated electricity.

The driver Beyma sent Voice Coil this month is a new transducer from its extensive line-up of 33 compression drivers. The 1” throat uber-compact CD1ND compression driver accompanied by the Beyma 90° x 40° TD-194 constant directivity horn (Photo 1). Designed for use with 1” throat horns, the ultra-compact footprint (64mm diameter) CD1ND is presented as a compression driver to use where a compact “high-quality” cost-effective compression driver is required for compact systems (e.g., in studio monitors or stage monitors). The Beyma CD1ND compression driver has a 1” (25.4mm) throat diameter driven by a 1” (25.1mm) diameter edge-wound voice coil wound with aluminum wire on a non-conducting former.
 
Photo 1: Beyma’s CD1ND is presented as a compression driver to use where a compact “high-quality” cost-effective compression driver is required for compact systems.

This assembly drives the field-replaceable polyimide diaphragm. Other features include a lightweight computer FEA-optimized neodymium ring magnet motor structure (the net weight is only 0.9 lbs.), a 20W AES power handling of 20W (above 2kHz, 40W program), a 2kHz recommended crossover frequency (with a minimum 12dB/octave high-pass network), a 1W/1m 110dB sensitivity, plus standard solderable terminals.

Along with the Beyma CD1ND, I used the Beyma 1” throat cast aluminum TD-194 90° × 40° constant directivity horn with a 1200Hz cut-off frequency. This horn is also conveniently marked so the user will get the orientation correct (Photo 2).
 
Photo 2: Beyma 1” throat cast aluminum TD-194 constant directivity horn frequency is marked so the user will get the orientation correct.

Testing began as usual by using the LinearX LMS analyzer to produce the 300-point stepped sine wave impedance plot shown in Figure 1, with the solid black curve representing the CD1ND mounted on the TD-194 horn and the dashed blue curve representing the compression driver without the horn. With nominal 8Ω impedance, the TD-194 horn has a 4.68Ω Re and minimum impedance of 5.31Ω at 4.99kHz.
 
Figure 1: Beyma CD1ND free-air impedance plot

For the first group of SPL measurements, I free-air mounted the Beyma CD1ND/TD-194 combination without an enclosure and measured both the horizontal on- and off-axis at 2.0V/0.5m (normalized to 2.83V/1m) from 0° on-axis to 60° off-axis using the Loudsoft FINE R+D analyzer and the GRAS 46BE microphone (supplied courtesy of Loudsoft and GRAS Sound & Vibration). Figure 2 displays the on-axis frequency response of the compression driver/horn, which shows a smooth ±1.5dB response from 2.1kHz to 10kHz (measured on the constant directivity “angle”). Figure 3 depicts the 0° to 60° on- and off-axis response in the horizontal plane. Figure 4 illustrates the normalized horizontal plane response. Figure 5 shows the 180° horizontal polar plot (in 10° increments with 1/3 octave smoothing applied), using the CLIO Pocket analyzer and accompanying microphone (courtesy of Audiomatica SRL).
 
Figure 2: Beyma CD1ND on-axis frequency response
Figure 3: Beyma CD1ND horizontal on- and off-axis frequency response (0° = black; 15° = blue; 30° = green; 45° = purple; 60° = blue)
Figure 4: Beyma CD1ND normalized horizontal on- and off-axis frequency response (0° = black; 15° = blue; 30° = green; 45° = purple; 60° = blue)
Figure 5: Beyma CD1ND 0° to 180° horizontal plane polar plot (in 10° increments)

For the vertical plane, Figure 6 illustrates the 0° to 60° on- and off-axis response. Figure 7 depicts the normalized vertical plane response. Figure 8 shows the CLIO Pocket analyzer-generated 180° vertical polar plot (in 10° increments with 1/3 octave smoothing applied).
 
Figure 6: Beyma CD1ND vertical on and off-axis frequency response (0° = black; 15° = blue; 30° = green; 45° = purple; 60° = blue)
Figure 7: Beyma CD1ND normalized vertical on- and off-axis frequency response (0° = black; 15° = blue; 30° = green; 45° = purple; 60° = blue)
Figure 8: Beyma CD1ND 0°to 180° vertical plane polar plot (in 10° increments)

The last of the SPL measurements, Figure 9 depicts the two-sample SPL comparison, showing the two Beyma CD1ND/TD-194 compression driver samples to be closely matched within 0.5dB to 1dB or less throughout the driver’s operating range.
 
Figure 9: Beyma CD1ND two-sample SPL comparison

For the remaining sequence of tests, I again set up the Listen, Inc. AudioConnect analyzer and 1/4” SCM microphone (provided to Voice Coil courtesy of Listen Inc.) to measure distortion and generate time-frequency plots. For the distortion measurement, I again mounted the Beyma CD1ND/TD-194 combination in free-air in the same manner as was used for the frequency response measurements. Next, I set the SPL to 104dB at 1m (2.20V), determined by using a pink noise stimulus generator and internal SLM in the SoundCheck 18 software. Then, I measured the distortion with the Listen microphone placed 10cm from the mouth of the horn. This produced the distortion curves shown in Figure 10, exhibiting very low third-harmonic content.

 
Figure 10: Beyma CD1ND SoundCheck distortion plots

After completing this test protocol, I then set up SoundCheck 18 to generate a 2.83V/1m impulse response curve for this driver/horn combination and imported the data into Listen’s SoundMap Time/Frequency software. Figure 11 shows the resulting cumulative spectral decay (CSD) waterfall plot. Figure 12 shows the Short Time Fourier Transform (STFT) plot.
 
Figure 11: Beyma CD1ND SoundCheck CSD waterfall plot
Figure 12: Beyma CD1ND SoundCheck STFT plot

Taking into consideration all the objective measurement data presented here, the ultra-compact Beyma CD1ND compression driver is clearly a well-engineered 1” compression driver, exhibiting good performance, outstanding build quality, and featuring an ultra-lightweight assembly, demonstrating the excellent transducer engineering I always observe when characterizing Beyma products. For more information about Beyma OEM pro sound products, visit www.beyma.com. VC

This article was originally published in Voice Coil, April 2022
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About Vance Dickason
Vance Dickason has been working as a professional in the loudspeaker industry since 1974. A contributing editor to Speaker Builder magazine (now audioXpress) since 1986, in November 1987 he became editor of Voice Coil, the monthly Periodical for the Loudspeake... Read more

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