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Can someone please explain the science behind this design?
Think of it as the front chamber of a ripole. The added airload in front of the cone will increase Mms, thereby reducing Fs and raising Qts. You will get a "hump" in the response curve around (the lowered) Fs. While this can be desirable, you will lose efficiency - massively. Since there is no rear chamber, the construction will tend towards a cardioid radiation pattern. Added to that the front chamber will act as a Helmholtz resonator which can be tuned to some frequency. This will superimpose the above effect.
love it.what is the volume of the front chamber?are the two woofers both sharing the front chamber or is there and internal panel separating two smaller chambers?
Dave,Very interesting speaker.Interesting enough for me to get sucked into modifying a MathCad worksheet to simulate the geometry to try and understand how it works. After a couple of hours I found that the port adds a sharp Helmholtz resonance in the 100 to 300 Hz range, depending on the cavity dimensions, where the crossover is being made. It was tough to get a smooth transition between the woofer and the full range driver in my model, some pretty severe wiggles were generated.I have not modeled your eact configuration, it could be done with some more effort, but I do not see much of an advantage of this concept over a basic U frame. Definitely a more challanging design and your speaker looks great. Not sure I am ready to make the extra effort.Martin
So the shrouding at the rear is of no consequence? Good to know.
Do you have a way to measure the AN driver? I expect it to have ragged, peaky response up high.Greg
The deep shroud actually made the drivers sound quite a bit smoother at higher levels. My original design only had 2 layers of mdf, the newest version has 6 layers. When I built the prototypes I simply added rings to the rear until I got the sound I was looking for, each ring changed the sound and in-room response just a little bit.Dave