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However, the use of glue is quite acceptable providing it does not react with the panel material or exciter foot.If you are going to use glue, make sure that it dries ''HARD''!..................any softish or mushy drying glue will kill the coupling and the much needed resonances required to transmit from the exciter to panel...............this is CRITICAL !
This is a shellac with titanium dioxide in it. If you want white, this will do. Titaniunm dioxide us the white base pigment you see in latex paints, and is the whitest of commonly used pigments. This primer will probably dry to a matte finish. Most other finishes will go over this well, which is why it is used as a primer.Check for a date on the can, as older shellac does not dry as well or as completely as fresh shellac.Might be sorth saturating the cardboard as much as possible with regular clear shellac first, then overcoating with this product. Shellac is a spirit-based finish, so there is no need to sand between coats except to get a smoother surface or to get rid of irregularities. If you do use clear on your first coats, try thinning the clear shellac by half or more so it has a better chance of penetrating some. Work quickly as shellac dries fast but will disturb the previous coats when you work over it too long. Whatever technique yo choose, test on a small piece first to make sure you will get the outcome you want.
I now know how the inventor of the PLANOT speaker felt as he got blasted to bits by the diyaudio crowd...............they're a fine lot!
Not a good comparison. I had to buy expensive low resonant material in much higher quantities than needed, had iron lasered, built a star-shaped structure that is much less resonant than the long bar and measured a 20 dB decline where the cancellation should happen in theory, so the talk about Moebius strips in the air is nonsense. On the other hand nobody doubts that NXT technology works.
This is a shellac ....................Might be sorth saturating the cardboard as much as possible ....................................... ....................................... ..