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So I notice that a lot of pre-90's speakers had wide front baffles - I just figured it was the style, or maybe it was a cheaper way to get more volume w/ less depth to the enclosure. ...What would be advantages of wide baffles?
It defies my understanding, and really, my brain just cannot wrap itself around how this discussion has completely avoided the obvious pun.
I'm not sure if this was mentioned yet, but wide baffle speakers seem more likely to acknowledge that the cabinet contributes to their overall sound, not detracts from it. In other words, the cabinet's voice can be utilized as part of the total sound of the speaker, both in tone and dispersion.
Rounding the edge deals with diffraction issues, not baffle reflection issues. Adding felt should positively affect both issues. Offsetting the driver enlarges the range of frequencies effected, but lowers the SPL increase on the affected frequencies (since you have two baffles, with one very small; rather than two medium baffles reinforcing each other)Horns are a bit more complex (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horn_loudspeaker)