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Hey Duke, I am kind of old school and have to admit that i like the sound of the Ampeg SVT (8 x10") rig. However I have absolutely no desire to hump something like that around. What i use is a 2x10' plus horn in a small cab. I can stack another 2x10 if needed. That is a good combo of size output and portability. Really for most venues, that is sufficient for stage volume. While 10's can sound good, they don't have the same weight as a good 15". Maybe you could do a 2x10, plus HF driver plus a 15 in a separate cab. If stackable and roughly the same size, that would be versatile little unit. I am not sure if you could cross the 15" high enough to add a HF driver, but that would really increase the versatility. Here is one time I would really be thrilled to see the Law broken. Hoffman's, that is. Regards,Drofo
One approach I'm considering is a two-piece system.The main cabinet would have a 12" woofer with a very capable motor, so it can move a lot of air, but it wouldn't be super-efficient. I'd aim for good reproduction of the first harmonic of both 4-string and 5-string bass. Reproducing the lowest fundamentals (41 Hz and 31 Hz respectively) at full volume calls for a much bigger cab, and/or much lower efficiency, than I think is practical. This cab would include a midrange driver that goes up to at least 6 kHz, along with a level control of some kind. I could take it up higher than 6 kHz without too much trouble, if that would be worthwhile.The other cab would house a 15" woofer with the same high quality motor as the 12" unit, but it would be about 3 dB more efficient (and predictably, this cabinet would be about twice as large). So adding the 15" woofer would boost the maximum bass level by nearly 6 dB. The midrange driver would be efficient enough that it could be adjusted to keep up when the 15" woofer is in use. I'd try to keep the voicing the same whether or not the 15" cabinet was in play.I hope to come in around 30 pounds for the small cabinet and 45 pounds for the big one. Each cabinet would have an impedance of 8 ohms and could handle about 400 watts, both thermally and mechanically. The idea would be that you could take the small cab to practice and small gigs, and then bring along the big one when needed. Any thoughts? Is this "different" enough from what's already out there to be worth a try?Duke
Dave, the drivers I have in mind have exceptional excursion capability. The 12 can move more air than any pair of bass guitar 10's I know of and more than most 15's, and the 15 can move more air than most 18's. The limiting factor in bass cabs is almost always displacement rather than thermal power handling, but in this case the woofers will run into their thermal and mechanical limits at just about the same time - so this is a more efficient use of their available capabilities.