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One of the down falls with experimenting with these exciter technology is that you will be throwing away a lot of your failures in the beginning just from attaching and retaching of the exciters as either the exciter will break or the panel will break or both when trying to detach them as one or both of them will give and I prefer to break the panel material instead of the exciter when trying to remove them....I use a thin knife or xacto blade to remove them.Also I dont like the 3m adhesive tape that comes with the exciters as they are not permenant and over time will come off plus like I said even the type of adhesive used to attach a exciter to a panel can effect its sound....my adhesive of choice is 2 part EPOXY, prefer the 5 minute epoxy so it sticks fast.Also someone on this topic mentioned about using GRAPHENE material which is very very expensive, way more expensive then even nomex honeycombs.
Bendingwave, if you listen to an intimate acoustic jazz trio, for instance, often the piano, bass and drums are only amplified (if at all) by a PA system. and if they are well balanced, the players don't drown out each other. It is only when acoustic bass or drums are close miced and played through a powerful PA with usually a large amps and subwoofer that there really is "slam" in the bass, drums and even other instruments. Of course, with rock or all electric bands electric bass has slam from the player's own amp and then that is amplified (usually at stadium levels even in an enclosed space). Do you remember the movie Spinal Tap where the stage amps were turned up to 11. I used to drive a PA for a 10 piece band and everyone always wanted to be louder than everyone else in the foldback and house mix!!!! After a while you just run out of headroom, even with a powerful PA, and just end up with distortion.For acoustic groups DML loudspeakers CAN produce the **actual** level of the performance for someone seated in the audience. Unfortunately, a lot of people are used to highly amplified music at concerts and try to recreate that SPL at home and they complain about lack of bass output. I am as guilty as anyone in complaining about this, but it is a false expectation. If you want concert levels get a good pair of headphones.Just my 2c worth.Ozziozzi
Odal3 have you tried the Ultra hard density EPS?
No - never had a chance. I have only used what I can found at the US home improvement stores (Home Depot, Lowes, etc.)Re bass - my experience is that bass is relative to size of panel, not necessarily power rating of exciter - the bigger panel the lower bass. I tried once putting multiple 40W exciter like I saw in one of the tectonic videos - the 1/4in birch panel was not stiff enough resulting in a lot of rattle due to "over-bending". Perhaps you need a different design altogether if you have very powerful exciters. ?
I noticed with some of the higher powered exciters that they have a horn or waveguide as part of the cooling vent. I wonder if you could use this same idea to boost the output from the rear of other exciters. Scuse crude drawing, but you get the ideaOzziozzi