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I am in a same situation as you, I find 15" is too big for me, I can tolerate 12". The low bass extension is only be obtained if the fs is suffciently low enough, normally 10" or 12" woofer has fs not less than 30Hz. The 15" from Hawthorn has fs=27Hz.If you use 10" woofer you have to live with less bass extension.
How about 15" Augie woofer(s) with a 10" main driver? That'll save some height. My Trios are built with sand filled main baffles, and I expect that the width could be narrowed a bit using more conventional construction.Doak
Quote from: doak on 13 Nov 2008, 11:20 pmHow about 15" Augie woofer(s) with a 10" main driver? That'll save some height. My Trios are built with sand filled main baffles, and I expect that the width could be narrowed a bit using more conventional construction.DoakI have no height problem but the width must be <=45cm, the Duo/Trio are 60cm. So, I'm going to ask Darrel if a different baffle design could work decently.Also, I'm having a bit of doubts about putting two 15" Augies in my room. Anybody confronted the Duo with the Trio? For me it's all about quality (soundstage, transparency, imaging) rather than quantity. I like thight, controlled bass, hence my interest in OB also for bass drivers.
Do you mean four Augies (2 per side) as opposed to just two total?
It's a matter of room size and dynamics I suppose... in which case quality generally follows quantity. More drivers = higher efficiency + dynamic headroom. JLHarden, who chimed in earlier, had 4 augies on each side (8 total) for his monstrous creation.
The Augies don't really care how big of room they are in. Think of it as reserve power and enjoy the ever diminishing distortion levels due to the additional headroom available. You on the other hand may feel they are too obtrusive, but that is a cosmetic issue and not an acoustical one. You might consider squeezing them in for the time being, if your not too distant plan is to move anyway. Your call. How about a 10" trio?J
Quote from: jlharden on 15 Nov 2008, 06:37 pmThe Augies don't really care how big of room they are in. Think of it as reserve power and enjoy the ever diminishing distortion levels due to the additional headroom available. You on the other hand may feel they are too obtrusive, but that is a cosmetic issue and not an acoustical one. You might consider squeezing them in for the time being, if your not too distant plan is to move anyway. Your call. How about a 10" trio?JThank you. It is also true that adding more woofers raise the sensitivity?I'm working with Darrel for a 10" quintet (passive) Still unsure of what i'll do in the end.
Quote from: Telstar on 15 Nov 2008, 08:55 pmI'm working with Darrel for a 10" quintet (passive) Still unsure of what i'll do in the end.Using a total of six 10" Augies surely will raise the efficiency and may come very close to equaling that of the 10" SI driver - interesting. Is it your intention to drive each speaker with one amplifier?Doak
I'm working with Darrel for a 10" quintet (passive) Still unsure of what i'll do in the end.
Quote from: doak on 15 Nov 2008, 11:33 pmQuote from: Telstar on 15 Nov 2008, 08:55 pmI'm working with Darrel for a 10" quintet (passive) Still unsure of what i'll do in the end.Using a total of six 10" Augies surely will raise the efficiency and may come very close to equaling that of the 10" SI driver - interesting. Is it your intention to drive each speaker with one amplifier?DoakMy intention is to drive all speakers with my amplifier, yes, if it's that what you mean Maybe with the 16ohm ones.Lots of ideas, brainstorming for now..
Hmmm, what load will that present to the amp then is the question?Doak
Quote from: doak on 16 Nov 2008, 12:18 amHmmm, what load will that present to the amp then is the question?DoakYeah... I'm making a thread on hawthorne forum. I took already a big amount of space on your review thread
It ain't mine either Telstar!
Here's my project:http://www.hawthorneaudio.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2480