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Now the whole time I'm wrapping green clay around this midrange frame I'm thinking this is the sickest joke Frank has ever played on us. Who is gullible enough to try this, photograph it, and then tell about it!! Oh the shame! Oh the horror!!DAMNED IF THERE WASN"T A DIFFERENCE _ IMMEDIATELY!!Luckily I had my 12 year old with me (he was bored and has been shadowing me - trying to irk me into giving him his Xbox controllers - it worked). He heard it as well. I put clay on one speaker and then we ran the balance back and forth side to side to see if we heard anything. Sure enough, the clay speaker wasn't as bright as the other. So is bright bad or good? Is quieter bad or good? I wasn't sure. I put him in the sweetspot and he said it was brighter (non-clayed speaker).So okay, I'll modify the left one now. Yep, it quieted down as well (less bright). It might be that the brightness was actually some sibilance now tamed.So now I'm doing some listening to see if I actually like the "new" sound.Jury's still out. But there is an impact. Damn Frank!
You can't put too much on for a couple reasons: need to clear the hole on the way back into the cabinet, can't glob it on the rear spider. Although that metal ring around the spider was tempting to try.
I remember an article about bracing the magnet with a rod support to the rear of the cabinet. Of course, that will transmit vibrations to the cabinet, so the trick would be to damp those out at the rear connection. I suspect we'll give all of this a look see when we get a little further along on the HT4.
Quote from: TomW16 on 30 Jan 2009, 02:22 amQuote from: DMurphy on 29 Jan 2009, 03:53 amGood heavens. You look normal. How did you get into this thread?I can't be that normal, I put a steel plate in my speaker QuoteQuote from: fsimms on 29 Jan 2009, 04:00 amQuoteI designed my speakers cabinets with a 1 inch thick steel plate (~40 lbs) to go between the top cabinet (containing the midrange and tweeter) and the woofer cabinet.That is a killer cabinet. It looks almost as good as Jim's!BobThanks Bob. I haven't seen Jim's cabinets in person but from the pictures and the rave reviews, I believe that Jim's cabinets are a notch above mine. I'm not the most patient person so I went with automotive primer, paint and clear coat since you can put many coats on in a day. Jim hand rubs his finishes out with curing time between. The pictures of Jim's speakers look stunning and I understand that the pictures don't do them justice.Cheers,TomWhere did you get the steel plates? I've been thinking about this or just getting thick marble or granite plates cut and doing the same thing with my speakers. I know where to get the granite but not steel. That's a good idea!
Quote from: DMurphy on 29 Jan 2009, 03:53 amGood heavens. You look normal. How did you get into this thread?I can't be that normal, I put a steel plate in my speaker QuoteQuote from: fsimms on 29 Jan 2009, 04:00 amQuoteI designed my speakers cabinets with a 1 inch thick steel plate (~40 lbs) to go between the top cabinet (containing the midrange and tweeter) and the woofer cabinet.That is a killer cabinet. It looks almost as good as Jim's!BobThanks Bob. I haven't seen Jim's cabinets in person but from the pictures and the rave reviews, I believe that Jim's cabinets are a notch above mine. I'm not the most patient person so I went with automotive primer, paint and clear coat since you can put many coats on in a day. Jim hand rubs his finishes out with curing time between. The pictures of Jim's speakers look stunning and I understand that the pictures don't do them justice.Cheers,Tom
Good heavens. You look normal. How did you get into this thread?
Quote from: fsimms on 29 Jan 2009, 04:00 amQuoteI designed my speakers cabinets with a 1 inch thick steel plate (~40 lbs) to go between the top cabinet (containing the midrange and tweeter) and the woofer cabinet.That is a killer cabinet. It looks almost as good as Jim's!Bob
QuoteI designed my speakers cabinets with a 1 inch thick steel plate (~40 lbs) to go between the top cabinet (containing the midrange and tweeter) and the woofer cabinet.That is a killer cabinet. It looks almost as good as Jim's!Bob
I designed my speakers cabinets with a 1 inch thick steel plate (~40 lbs) to go between the top cabinet (containing the midrange and tweeter) and the woofer cabinet.
I don't remember the vendor's name but I purchased the steel plates through eBay. They cut them to the dimensions you specify. You would think that shipping would be prohibitively expensive, however, USPS has a flat rate for anything that can fit into their shipping box (~$9.00). The postal delivery person said that we definitely got our money's worth noting the weight of the 2 steel slabs that were shipped.Cheers,TomQuote from: Biscuit on 31 Jan 2009, 11:03 pmQuote from: TomW16 on 30 Jan 2009, 02:22 amQuote from: DMurphy on 29 Jan 2009, 03:53 amGood heavens. You look normal. How did you get into this thread?I can't be that normal, I put a steel plate in my speaker QuoteQuote from: fsimms on 29 Jan 2009, 04:00 amQuoteI designed my speakers cabinets with a 1 inch thick steel plate (~40 lbs) to go between the top cabinet (containing the midrange and tweeter) and the woofer cabinet.That is a killer cabinet. It looks almost as good as Jim's!BobThanks Bob. I haven't seen Jim's cabinets in person but from the pictures and the rave reviews, I believe that Jim's cabinets are a notch above mine. I'm not the most patient person so I went with automotive primer, paint and clear coat since you can put many coats on in a day. Jim hand rubs his finishes out with curing time between. The pictures of Jim's speakers look stunning and I understand that the pictures don't do them justice.Cheers,TomWhere did you get the steel plates? I've been thinking about this or just getting thick marble or granite plates cut and doing the same thing with my speakers. I know where to get the granite but not steel. That's a good idea!
Where did you get the steel plates? I've been thinking about this or just getting thick marble or granite plates cut and doing the same thing with my speakers. I know where to get the granite but not steel. That's a good idea!