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Infact I don't/didn't like it at all, I'm afraid./Erling
Yes, the three-panel ones. Unlike on the single-panel Maggies, the midrange is a separate driver, in its own panel next to the ribbon tweeter, and it's the weakest range. It comes out as a unit and leaves a nice slot. When the mids died on Satie's Tympani IV's, he replaced them with a line of six Neo-8's with excellent results. So I've been planning to do something similar with my IVa's using the Neo 8's, 8s's, or 10's -- but since it will be a while before I can do this I'm open to other possibilities.The IVa's woofer crossover is actually unusually high, between 250 and 400 Hz. (There's also an acoustic crossover between the low bass and midbass panels, so in a sense it's a four-way system.)
With regard to using the ER mini panels as mids, josh358 says:Sorry it took me a while to get back to this. From what I understand from Rob, the panels were designed to allow easy connection of two stacked, with the connections brought out the other end to allow a short wire to connect to a second. I haven't verified this on my pair.I was actually making good progress with baffles today until an afternoon storm... From what you're saying four stacked would be ideal - ? On that, I have no idea on the best configuration. 'stats do need a power supply and HV transformer.
I'm thinking a series/parallel arrangement could work for four.BTW, if you're having trouble cutting holes, have you considered Baltic birch ply for your baffle? It seems to be preferred these days by speaker designers and it's easier to work with than particle board.
BTW, if you're having trouble cutting holes, have you considered Baltic birch ply for your baffle? It seems to be preferred these days by speaker designers and it's easier to work with than particle board.
here is an answer i got earlier from ER Audio's Rob4 panels per channel would only be required for quite large venues. You have a couple of choices how to arrange them. If you know you are going to use 3 panels in an array then I would advise not using the inbuilt transformers, instead you would use the Mid / Treble Acorn transformer we advertise on our website. This will happily drive 3 panels without HF roll-off. We are getting some separate HV supplies so this can be done quite easily (you're not the first to ask!!). If you are driving 2 panels you can use the inbuilt transformers and connect them in series, this will give a nicer impedance for the amplifier to see and the transformers are consistent enough to avoid asymmetric voltage sharing.
Hi Josh, these are just a prototype using cheap (or free, it was sitting in the spare room) material. It's not the material that's the issue it's me forgetting to add 12mm to the scale on the jig because of the router bit size. Anyway I'm getting there, the second one is much neater, should get the supports finished up today.I'd love to use BB for the final one but I haven't been able to find any.
meaning four panels is pushing it (68")
Hi John,It seems you can order Baltic birch ply online, I'm not sure what the quality is like or whether these prices are reasonable, but I found some sources in Google:https://www.google.com/search?q=baltic+birch+plywood&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a
You're right! Found a place not too far from me, $128 for 18x1200x2400 plus delivery. Wil go have a look at it, he says it's B surface grade.
I would have thought the less panels the better. Unless you are sitting in a very far field.