Hello Paul,
Thanks for your last reply, it seems that you too, are aware on problems wich could appear by doubling a speaker.
At first, I must explain why I don't mail with Dave Ellis about this project:
- As the creator of the 1801, I feel a little bothered to submit him a process that, somewhere, is a modification of his creation.
- Technicaly, I'm quite sure that he doesn't approve the decreased impedance of the speaker, a lot of posts about 1801 WTW projects prove it.
- I know his integrity and he will never say me "yes, go on" without having tested this project.
- He don't have time for such kinds of frenzy.
- He needs time for his 3ways.
Secondly, if I decide to proceed with this project, I'll post the review only with Ellis permission ( except for you Paul and for my loving pem and raoul

) and if results aren't what I whished, fault will only be mine and nobody else.
However, as I said you, I believe that this project can be viable: prove is the double Kal vs the kalibrator (in a side note, the 1801 is much better than these two on all the criterions).
Now, if you or others are interested on this project, please let me know your minds about what I write here:
THE problem is the radiation pattern. Radiation pattern is nothingelse than different energys (spl) on different frequencys, in relationship with time delays.
Two 1801 are two perfectly identical speakers with same radiation pattern. With one couple of 1801, the target is obviously not to get the same radiation pattern than the single 1801 but a perfectly symetrical radiation pattern.
If the tweeters are both verticaly placed very near one to the other, the woofers in the same place than the single 1801 in a horizontal mirror image and if the virtual line separeting the tweters is at the same height than the common height of the listener ears, you will get a virtual point source; it's to say that all the energy of all the frequencys of the two drivers couples add simultaneously at the same time; if so, no slanted baffle needed, and no different deepness between the couples of drivers needed; in this way you can build a one piece box. The only problem could be the floorbounces energy, different from the woofer at the bottom than this at the top; but this problem exist with the single 1801 too and tuning the ports differently from one VB to the other could, IMO, reduce this effect.
Now, if the virtual separeting horizontal line between the two couples of drivers aren't at the height of your ears, you should need to build two separeted boxs with at least, or the topbox slanted, or the bottom deeper placed; in this way, diffraction problems could appear and should be treated.
So, one piece box is for me the best and most simple way.
Regards

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