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How true, probably half my friends from my youth now reside in the Sunshine State
I've spent the last week listening to a pair of Hestias on test baffles. Its all plywood and alligator clips. I am most impressed. My first exposure to OB and its all true. Big soundstage, depth, and detail. Thank you Matevana. I am using two sets of MCMs instead of a second pair of Daytons. Lots of bass response. Even with the Yung amp turned down my old wooden floors are jumping around. I've been trying different amps and moving the speakers around and like the openness and fullness of this design. I thought the top end was somewhat harsh at first, but that is disappearing. Could the top end drivers be breaking in after only 10 or 12 hours?The only complaint I have is that even though the sound is very full I still can tell that it is coming from a point lower than my listening level, even with the baffles angled up. I would like to move the tweeter up to ear level somewhere around 33/36". As I see it I can add 10 or 12 inches to the bottom of the baffle and move the whole configuration up, which along with any other effects would decouple the bass from the floor. Or I could add more baffle and move the tweeter/mid up and leave the bass down leaving a gap in the middle of the baffle. Thirdly, I could add a second mid, wire the two in series and thus keep the same SPL as just one . I wonder if doing that would give more continuity from the tweeter down to the floor. I sort of like that third idea. Would these changes, which at the very least would add to the size of the baffle, compromise the design in other ways?On a side note Matevanna I've been reading about the 2x rule of thumb, making the baffle at least two times as wide as any adjacent driver. What are your thoughts on that? You obviously didn't feel constrained by that rule on the Hestia.The music is great. Thanks for making it easy and affordable for at least one rookie to enjoy the sound of OB.
EdThanks for setting me straight. I will continue to listen for a while before I make any final changes on a permanent baffle. I did however make a few reversible changes. I lifted the baffles, first 6 inches and then 12, roughly, to see how tweeters at ear level would sound. Surprisingly to me it didn't change that much, although a little bit. Even on the floor the soundstage seems to be slightly above the baffles.However, I think I did hear the floor bounce effect, you mentioned, when the baffles were elevated to 12 inches. Big time. I am listening about 8-10 feet away and when I sat forward the full sound was there. Sitting back about 18" or so and the vocals just went into a box. Nothing subtle at all. They attenuated dramatically. I assume it was a result of the floor bounce, especially on the lower midrange. I read some consider that floor bounce effects are minimal but what I heard was significant. At 6 inches high, I heard no negative effect at all. I will listen quite a bit more, but I think I liked the sound a little better with the baffles a little higher. Definitely not 12 inches higher, in this room. What effect would splitting the bass and midrange drivers about 6 inches have? That is keeping the bass driver down where it is and lifting the mid/tweeter combo? Hopefully, I am not being too much of a pain with all these questions, I'm just interested in what different tweaks would do. I'll be following Squidspeak's progress on a wider baffle bottom.Peter[/quoteHey SJ, wanted to check up on the build, I still have not started but , I am definetly gonna gowith the Dayton 15 on the bottom and everything else in line with original (awesome) design.
Those Yung amps seem to get a lot of good reviews. I like the power output and lightweight. Will most likely go with this route as it seems to be the cheapest method to get good quality bass amplification. So which one would be better for this project. The one with 0db boost or 6db? Another question would be how I should hook up the signal. A lot of my current setup is pro audio oriented. PC to Sound interface (presonus audiobox) to mixer, to behri dsp1424 (to limit noise/gains/hard limiter), to EQ (room correction/other) to active crossover, to amplifiers (1 of which I don't like). Should I hook the plate amplifiers after the crossover (is the crossover in the yung disable able?) or would this be to much input voltage? Or hook from the sound interface before mixer?Might have been a lot easier if I hadn't given my dad my old Newcastle 965r.The Hestia designs seems to be for relaxing on the couch listening to music or watching cinema where as mine currently are for standing walking around/party. As the tweeters are at standing level.As far as the speaker is concerned is the 15" baffle necessary? Currently the baffle is at 12" but putting some molding or reworking the baffle all together shouldn't prove to difficult. I would have to have a new baffle anyway for a offset tweeter in the design anyway. My router died on me leaving me with just my rotozip and its circle cutter (so no driver sinking T_T) I know that it makes a huge difference for tweeters but what about mids and woofers?Also I hope the new driver style sounds the same as the current ones because I'm very impressed with them. When I first tried the originals out they sounded far from appealing. But after playing them it warms my heart sometimes knowing that I just bought those for 25 a piece. Breaking these in are a must, Spectacular.If anyone wants I can post a pic of the new cone style.I would love to hear the slot loaded sub project also.
I've tried subs with my Alphas in flat baffles and in H-frames and IMO they detract more than they add. I guess I have a problem with how a sealed sub loads a room. To me it's not natural. The Alphas may not be everyone's choice but I like their bass weight and fast transients. The Yung class D amps add detail I wasn't getting with SS amps. I listen to mostly jazz and I'm hearing more wood and string resonance when bass players use that "slap style"of picking.