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John,I was thinking that I when I open the speakers, I would route a thin set of wires into the cabinet. I would have to run them so that the bass/midrange could then be put over the wires. I'd then play the normal test tones from ETF. I'd tape the mic somewhere, near a corner perhaps. I could use several different locations. It would be interesting to go front to back (or side to side), but that might take more rigging than what I'd like to do. I could easily perform a test with stuffing/wool and ...
I don't see why you couldn't have standing waves having frequencies on the order of the size (length/width). True bass, like 20Hz would be too long. Here's some sites:http://speakers.lifetips.com/cat/61238/speaker-cabinets/http://www.silcom.com/~aludwig/Loudspeaker_construction.htmlThe wavelength in feet is 1137.30 ft/second divided by the frequency (at 25C, and vice versa). We'd need to get about 6 feet (is that the height of the speakers?), which would be about 190 Hz. For 1.25 feet in width ...
Interestly enough some "transmission lines" have impedance curves which have the double hump characteristic of a vented alignment centered on the frequency to which the line is tuned. The impedance curve should show a single low hump at the system resonance and a series of smaller peaks of greatly reduced magnitude at even multiples of the fundamental frequency. As a sidebar many transmission lines are 3/4 wavelength lines instead of one quarter wavelength lines because the designer failed to take in ...
Totally off topic at the moment, but you guys have GOT to try this bh5 mod. The amount of bass I picked up in my 626rs as well as the confluence of drivers (I got that term from TAS ) is amazing!
John, If you were to put an eye bolt into the top of the empty speaker cabinet and suspend it from from the ceiling you have a good approximation of a large wooden bell. If you then strike the cabinet with a mallet and measure the resonant frequency and the harmonics that result from the excitation supplied by striking the sides of the box you know where your problem frequencies lie. You could also mount a fairly wide range driver in one of the woofer cutouts facing inward and measure the impact the box h ...
I have to agree you skrivis, King's and Augspuger's work should be required reading for anyone thinking about DIYing their own TL loudspeaker. http://www.quarter-wave.com/http://www.t-linespeakers.org/ The reason I suggested using a driver mounted to the enclosure or striking the sides with a mallet was to directly excite the box walls and measure the different resonances that resulted from each wall and upon retesting find out how effective the bracing was in suppressing structural vibration mod ...
The reason I suggested using a driver mounted to the enclosure or striking the sides with a mallet was to directly excite the box walls and measure the different resonances that resulted from each wall and upon retesting find out how effective the bracing was in suppressing structural vibration mod ...
Brian, do you walk softly and carry a large mallet?
Quote from: skrivisBrian, do you walk softly and carry a large mallet?Somehow, I can picture scenarios involving Brian, a large mallet, and various people on AC.
Just thought I would add what I have heard now that I havce the larger done with bh5 as well. Wow, is all I can say. I thought the improvement with adding the bh5 to the 626rs was good, but it is of a greater magnitude with the larger. I thought I had taut, well defined bass before, but the amount of sheer authority the bh5 has brought to the larger is absolutely first rate and incredible. The changes to the 626r are less obvious but certainly worth the effort. They seem to just sound better, with ...