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You have my admiration for making that statement,,,, there are many more manufacturer's that would say their instruments are the final word. I look forward to seeing your final design, whatever that may be.
That's interesting. I always knew that 1.5" was acoustically small, but I didn't know it was non-measurable.
I accomplished 30-50 measurements (MLS and Gated) attempting to discern any notable differences - most of them off axis. Most of the measurements were horizontal variations and a few vertical variations.
I will never purvey, or build a speaker with less than a 1 1/2" radius roundover in the future.
all other things being equal.. but, i have heard way too many square edge cabinets that just sound so good,
would proac, for example, not use round-edge cabinets if they would impart even better performance?
at the prices they already charge, it would be easy to absorb (or pass on to the buyer!) the extra cost.
speaking of Proac's, this brings up my second comment. maybe you were not comparing apples to apples. did you try a round edge floor stander & a square edge stand mount? or a round-edge vs square edge of the same cabinet style? i ask this because i know i distinctly prefer the proac 1sc over the proac 1.5, & these are basically the same speaker, except the 1.5 is floor-standing & the 1sc is stand-mount...
it is a crying shame that such an attractive cabinet is not useful.
.....No. The bottom line... I will never purvey, or build a speaker with less than a 1 1/2" radius roundover in the future. If the subjective value of the Sonicap Platinum bypass capacitor implementation is $180, the subjective value of the 1 1/2" radius roundover on all edges of the baffle is $400-$500. This is my conveyance and and the believe of the other local gentlemen who performed the a/b testing during the final stages of the 1801C. I will explain the history and backround. I made several incorrect assumptions. First, I assumed that if having a large radius roundover on a speaker was important that ALL truly high-end loudspeakers would implement a large radius roundover. This assumption was incorrect. Second, I assumed that a 3/4" roundover should have a some impact, but in very thorough previous testing (objective and subjective). This assumption was incorrect. Third, I assumed that if a large radius roundover was significant, then surely the DIY crowd would implement this in their workshops. This assumption was incorrect.
does the hardwood baffle now have to be at least 1 1/2" thick
Dave - Are you close enough to completing your design work that you can give us an ETA for when you might begin selling kits?
Isn't a 1-1/2" roundover best (and most safely) cut on a shaper?
Regarding the 1 1/2" roundover on your prototype "C"s: I assume that with the floor-stander you would not need to roundover the botton edge.
Or, for the 1-1/2" round over, make multiple angle cuts with a table saw to approximate the round over, then hand finish. Would it work to use a cabinet scraper ground to the 1-1/2" radius?...could a proper burr be put on the scraper's round-over edge?
David - I love my 1801b's, so I'm very curious what to expect from the 1801c's. When you have a chance, could you summarize the sonic differences between them?