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IIRC they have low sensitivity so they will need some power to drive unless they are used as nearfield/desktop.
This pair of speakers will be near-field or paired to a subwoofer.Tyson, Imagine my posting in your recent thread that there were a cheaper and more efficient pair of speakers to give to your friend...and that my speakers were more efficient than your gift speakers. Imagine how you might feel.I stated that I had already ordered a pair of Overnight Sensations in my first post. Should I demand a refund and jump on the PE deal? Think a bit.
For $149 with flat pack included, how can I go wrong?
Thanks for suggesting Tung oil, JohnR. I think I have some.I read through the assembly instructions on the PE website, and did not see any mention of using polyfil inside the cabinet. I had planned to use GR Research NoRez - is this a bad idea for the OS speakers?Michael
Compared:Empty boxDime store poly fill (the slick stuff)Recycled cotton battingLong hair woolMaidsound special poly Acoustastuff that was on sale. (denser)Empty box:F3 @ 85 Hz, about 1 dB more output from 50 to 200Polyfill: F3 @ 80 Hz, less smooth below F3.Cotton: F3 @ 75 Hz, much smoother clear across the spectrumWool: F3 @ 75, maybe a tad smootherAcoustastuff: F3 @ 75 and just about an overlay of the wool.Conclusion:10 Hz for a little box is a big deal. 12% 'taint nutun to sneeze at!Poly is better than nothing, but best left for stuffing craft pillows
But this is ported. I read somewhere once there's value in building a design stock first, otherwise you don't know what effect your changes had. Plus, if you're giving it away, you can start again and/or do something more ambitious. Assuming you got the bug, that is
DAMPING:These definitely need stuffing and I think it’s worth playing with the quantity a little bit. I can’t really improve on Paul Carmody’s advice which is to keep adding stuffing until the bass sounds “huge”. You’ll know it when you hear it. Without the stuffing there is a boxiness which diminishes the scale of the speaker and makes them sound a bit weedy & echoey.I started with too much, which made them better fleshed out but also kind of slow. I eventually halved the total amount and teased it out more. I weighed the final amount on some rudimentary kitchen scales and guesstimate it to be not more than around 10g per speaker...
You can't really. Baltic birch is easy to finish with Tung oil and the like too, no paint or veneer needed https://www.parts-express.com/overnight-sensations-mt-speaker-kit-pair--300-706(The other ones mentioned are MDF.)
A while back I designed a pair of OS into a bluetooth boombox and I'm thrilled with their sound. I drive them with Dayton's KAB-250 amplifier and a handful of lithium batteries.And yes, the 'bronze/aluminum' cones on the HiVi drivers clash horribly with the absurd red metal flake finish I put on them. As Tyson pointed out, the low sensitivity makes them sub-optimal for portable applications, but I can still run it for an hour or two at offensive volume, or all day at more normal levels. Everyone who has heard it is amazed at the sound quality, I guess expecting more typical portable speaker performance.I also built a pair of Paul's MTM version as a gift for my in-laws. They sound very similar to me, but with the two mids it takes a bit less power to get some ruckus out of them.mresseguie, I think they'd make an awesome gift for your friend's son. Jeff