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07-13-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 76
Post ID: 7807
Reply to: 7783
RTA break
Romy,

Thanks again for your comments.

The RTA and filter mods over the past few days have driven me straight up to the local café to chill out; they have WiFi here (this being France, still no internet at the house)... I will be brief.

Regarding mic positioning : I took some measuremnets from the listening point... My god, what a mess! This resulted in a phase of obsessive-compulsive filter tweaking, which went on until colapsing on the couch from fatigue, where I finally concluded something like what you mention below:

"...What Jessie you do are relatively simple measurements and in your case the microphone might be at any position – even at the mouth of the horns... So, the data that you collect via measurement will be juts to interpreted differently in case you measure from your listening position vs. you measure at 1 M from a given horn..."

I think I need to leave the filters for the moment, settle down, listen to the system (while cleaning the place up a bit !!!)... and get going on the mid-bass horns.

In the mean time, I am really starting to see what drove you to DSET (and also the Water Drop tweeter).

jd*



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-13-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,184
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 77
Post ID: 7809
Reply to: 7807
Some thoughts while settling down.

Yep, it is a lot of work and it might look like not well organized work but there is good part in all of it – when you will be do you will be done and you would never do it again. Practice shows that those custom tailored systems are made and then used for tens years.  Sure you might move to different rooms in future that would lead for some minor crossover adjustments or you might try different derivers to get desired qualities of a given channel but the bone of this type acoustic system is pretty mush fixed and has not a lot of room for any further improvements. Well, unless Mr. Le Cleach invents some kind of new horn profile that would be better but will not be compatible with anything else… OK, it was a joke…

Anyhow, I do not know at which stage your project is what I think you are somewhere in a process of integrating the drivers. Do not forget that any audio project is a wonderful opportunity to buy another set of stupid audio tools – your case is not an exception. I have two large boxes - one with coils and one with caps; the indictor and capacitance meters. They are the tools I used to search for my crossovers – I trust the calculations and the predicted response but I still always would like to have the tangible feeling what is going on. This pain might be optimized. You might get yourself Pioneer D-23 crossover. It is it a very nice and flexible 4 way unit:

http://www.thevintageknob.org/PIONEER/SERIES20/S20D23-specs.html

You might run one channel opened and then with the D-23 to observe the level of it’s none-transparency and then extrapolate the observed non-transparency in your judgment.  Do not take the digital crossovers out of consideration. The Behringer is $300 unit it means that you might rent it from you local pro shop for 10% per day. (My shop consider Saturdays to rent and Monday to return as one day). The digital crossover is also a very nice tool for prototyping. What I like about those prototyping tools - I like 2 things. First, using them you actually trying and listen instead of ordering the caps and fight with coils. Second, when you use the crossover prototyping tools you do not listening the actual sound of channel. Instead you practice the target listening – try to hear exactly what you need. I found it is self-educational.

Still, the fixed coils and caps might do – you can always parallel of serialize them… If I were you I would not think at this point about DSET.  The DSET has own complexities and before trying to assess those complexities you need to have a references how your acoustic system shell perform before it will be enriched or screwed by DSET. Your Lamm ML2.0 shall do wonderful job to drive your thing…

I would propose to spend a year or two living with a built and fully functional installation and then to see if you feel any needs for “other” amplification. If you decide that you need other amplification then it should be not the architectural decision but rather your very specific sonic demands that you flash out from a performance of you setup at that time.

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
07-16-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 78
Post ID: 7826
Reply to: 4906
Adjustable rear chamber (Photos)
Ronnie wrote (and posted the following image):
"...I was thinking the same. But perhaps rubber rings can be used to seal the back chamber to make it instantly tune-able (without the hard foam)..."

sealed-chamber-tuning.gif

Romy wrote a thread called the "Practical Guide to Back Chamber Tuning", complete with illustrations.
http://www.goodsoundclub.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?postID=6011#6011

First thank you Ronnie and Romy...

I took your thoughts into the workshop (which is also the living room), and here is the result :

Rear_ch_parts_01.jpg
Above: The parts for one rear chamber. Rather than sliding a cylinder on the outside of the horn as in Ronnie's illustration, I decided to sleeve the horn's inner surface, and fabricate a piston that would slide within that sleeve. The cylinder is a heavy duty sewer pipe (expensive, and I had to buy 3m) The piston (foreground) has a rubber seal, which I've pulled out of its groove for the photo. The mechanism that drives the piston is a threaded shaft, with one end welded to a mini turn-table, and the other end destined to be threaded into the support that runs across the large circular clamping ring in the upper left of the image. The disc in front of the cylinder is the "other end" of the chamber; this is where the driver is bolted.

Rear_ch_parts_02.jpg
Above: Driver installed (Fane Studio 8Ms in this case) and wired to the binding posts visible on the clamping ring. The cylinder as well as the holes where the wires come through are sealed with silicone.

Rear_ch_parts_03.jpg
Above: Piston installed. Note the little valve in the piston... The air-tight seal works better than expected, so I decided to put a in bleeder, which, if opened, will keep from sucking or blowing a hole in the drivers membrane while adjusting the piston.

Rear_ch_parts_04.jpg
Above : Assembly ready to plug into the horn. The face that mates with the horn (top of image) is covered in wool felt (the two little felt discs under the clamping ring are there to protect the binding posts while taking the photo).

R3qtr_02.jpg
Above : The assembly is bolted to the horn. Once the bolts are "tight", the gap between the clamping ring and the rear face of the horn will remain; this is to permit compression of the felt seal between the mating surfaces of the chamber and the horn, as well as putting a resonance-canceling load on the cylinder. It also permits adding a longer piece of sewer pipe should a larger rear chamber volume become necessary. So, ready to start tuning!


jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-16-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
be
Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts 86
Joined on 02-12-2007

Post #: 79
Post ID: 7827
Reply to: 7826
The coupling from chamber to horn
Very nice project you have, an inspiring effort!
Loking at the pictures it seems to me that you are using felt in front of the chamber front plate to seal the coupling between the horn and the chamber?
This could cause some problems if the felt sheat is open towards the horn throat.
Here the sound presure is at the highest and and the sheat could function as a strongly dampened porous chamber, depending on how much the felt is compressed.
Since the area of the front of the felt sheat is quite large it might be difficult to compress it enough, dispite the large bolts to get rid of the porousity.
My experience with placing felt in the throat area is that it is very effective in making the sound go flacid.
Maybe, to avoid possible problems, you could use a rubber o ring or some corck?

Regards be
07-16-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 80
Post ID: 7828
Reply to: 7809
Life at speaker-level (+ Photos)
Quotes from Romy in blue:

"...Anyhow, I do not know at which stage your project is what I think you are somewhere in a process of integrating the drivers..."

I would like to stabilize the system, and listen to the existing horns, while starting work on the mid-bass horns. Why the rush? Simple: Summer is here and I need to get the fiberglass and resin going now, otherwise I'll be freezing my butt off with the windows open this winter (can't afford to breath any more toxic fumes!).

For the past couple of weeks, I've been working with crossovers, as well as some final details (like replacing the bits of scrap wire I've been using between drivers, with new wire).

"...Do not forget that any audio project is a wonderful opportunity to buy another set of stupid audio tools – your case is not an exception..."

Man I'm right there with you on that one... On top of that, I have a major weakness for well-made boat anchors! One day I will post a photo of all my stupid audio tools...

I like the idea of the Poineer crossover... Regarding digital units; just looking at the face plate on the one from Behringer scares me (perfectly intuitive for someone "from the other side", which means it would take me two weeks to understand), but it is surely a very capable unit. It is no accident that I live right next to a shop selling really nice coils, and pretty decent caps; I don't mind the work of swapping components... It was just difficult to get things to move in the right direction with mic placed in the listening position.

"...when you use the crossover prototyping tools you do not listening the actual sound of channel. Instead you practice the target listening – try to hear exactly what you need. I found it is self-educational..."

I'll keep this in mind.

"...Still, the fixed coils and caps might do – you can always parallel of serialize them…"

Yes, I have been.

If I were you I would not think at this point about DSET.  The DSET has own complexities and before trying to assess those complexities you need to have a references how your acoustic system shell perform before it will be enriched or screwed by DSET. Your Lamm ML2.0 shall do wonderful job to drive your thing…

I am not for the moment thinking about DSET amps for myself, but looking at the RTA curves and trying to get what I want from the various drivers does tend to underline the advantages of this aproach. For example, killing the output from my upper-bass horn above 700Hz... Every time I stick a coil on the driver (any of the drivers I've tried in that horn), I end up pulling it back off let it go full-range.

Back in your "full-range amp/speaker-level crossover days", you wrote that a coil used with the upper-bass horn, tends to "talk" with the S2s... In my case, I don't know if this is what's happening... Need to do some target listening. I keep telling myself that I MUST use a coil with this horn... I mean, I have a lower-mid horn etc... But the system just sounds better with the upper-bass horns running full range.

In any case, again, I'd like to get the existing system to a stable state... Sort of a foundation to which I can add the mid-bass horns.

BTW, here are some photos showing one frame loaded with horns and drivers :

F3qtr_02.jpg


SV_detail_02.jpg


R3qtr_01.jpg

There is space, and the frames are strong enough to support an additional load, but for the moment, I don't imagine adding anything.

jd*

PS : I will most likely be going with a hyperbolic/exponential profile for the mid-bass horns... Anyone know of a good Hypex profile generator? Also, yes, I've sort of started to admit that rectangular horns are probably the way to go... Believe it or not, they will be more difficult and require more tooling than round horns. No matter, they offer the advantage of preserving access the kitchen.




How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-16-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 81
Post ID: 7829
Reply to: 7827
Sealing material (rear chamber)

be wrote :
"...Loking at the pictures it seems to me that you are using felt in front of the chamber front plate to seal the coupling between the horn and the chamber? This could cause some problems if the felt sheat is open towards the horn throat..."

Hello be,

Thanks for your advice (and for the compliment).

You are correct, the felt is between the mating faces of the removable chamber and the horn. However, the hole in the felt is the same size as the throat of the horn, so the only part of the felt that is "exposed" to sound pressure is that which is found on the inner edge of the hole in the felt seal (about 3.5mm when compressed). Did you understand that this was the case?

"...My experience with placing felt in the throat area is that it is very effective in making the sound go flacid.
Maybe, to avoid possible problems, you could use a rubber o ring or some corck?..."

Though I have not detected any "flaccidity", using another material here would be simple, and would remove any doubt. Before doing anything, I might try crawling up into the horn and covering the edge of the felt seal (the part that's exposed to sound pressure) with aluminum tape; this stuff is should allow bridging the 3.5mm gap with enough rigidity to get an idea.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-16-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
be
Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts 86
Joined on 02-12-2007

Post #: 82
Post ID: 7830
Reply to: 7829
Seal
"Did you understand that this was the case?"
Yes.
"Though I have not detected any "flaccidity""
I am not shure if will be any difference, but I would find it worth a try..

be
07-17-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,184
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 83
Post ID: 7833
Reply to: 7828
It is very stimulating to observe....

Jessie, a few comments.

The back chamber mechanism is good. Are you planning to do the same in the midbass horn? Since you most likely will not drive your upperbass all the way down I think that the back chamber mechanism  will be more effective at your midbass. Be advised that the driver will generate a lot of pressure in there and the sipping of air will reduce the effectiveness of the back chamber. I do not say that it will be bad if the pressure will be losing from it but I say it will change effectiveness. Also, do not forgets that most likely you will end up with the ultra low size of back chamber when the vertical back wall sitting to the driver magnet will farm already too large chamber. What you might end up doing is to glue to the back of the slideable wall a space-killing indentation that would have a contra-template of the Fane driver. This would effectively to push out the air from the driver sided. I would put even some filing into the driver frame’ holes… Also, turned John Hasqiun to your, Jessie, project and he pointed a very valuable point that you might overlooked. He suggested that this design shell have a way to vent the back chamber as it being adjusted, otherwise he will over or under pressurize the woofer cone and damage it.

The entire speaker looks very nice. Well thought and well executed. There are a few comments still. It feels that there is very little room for the tweeter to breathe. It is not the narrow firing tweeter and I think you might give to it a little bit more room. The frame that holds the Fundamentals Channel is is kind of odd esthetically. It looks like it was not from there. I do not know how bone-firm and how heavy your Fundamentals horn, but is it does need some support and cannot just to hang then you might consider to  use a harness around a horn and a single rod from the top of the frame to the horn. What I am trying to say that the support of the Fundamentals Channel might be more elegant…

Going for exponential midbass is probably good idea; most likely I would do the same if I go for 50Hz horn, I would most likely go for rectangular of for a shape with 2-3 straight side and 1-2 curved, juts for sake of esthetes. Unfortunately talking about the masking “appearance” of midbass horn it is is impossible to do not consider the given real-east envelopment. Since you, Jessie, live in rented apartment and most likely will move (well, when you finish you system they will kick you out of the building anyway) then you might consider to make the double-action midbass horns. What I mean is that pretend that you horn is 8 feet. So, you make the first 5 feet from the throat is firm and solid and the last , the most larger 3 feet, detachable and perhaps with odd edge profile. The next time you move and realize that your horn would block your entrance in bathroom, or the corner of the horn blocks a half of your window and look to prominent on the room then you juts change the termination part of the horn…

It is very interesting to see what you do Jessie, in contrary to many audio people I know who just endlessly run their mouth on audio subjects you actually do the things. It is very stimulating to observe you progress. Whan you finish then bring your installation to a city with good FM programming and you will be getting from high-end audio and much as it possible to get from it.

The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
07-17-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 84
Post ID: 7836
Reply to: 7833
Details : Mid & upper bass horns
Romy's quotes in blue:
Daniel J. Plach's quote in green:

"...The back chamber mechanism is good. Are you planning to do the same in the midbass horn?..."

Yes, it will be similar, but more robust; I have an idea for a locking-type seal, which I would probably double. If that doesn't do the trick, I'll make a permanent plug corresponding to the correct volume, once that has been established.

"...Be advised that the driver will generate a lot of pressure in there and the sipping of air will reduce the effectiveness of the back chamber..."

The original idea was to use the adjustable chambers to find the correct volume, then replace the sealing mechanism with one that would not permit sliding the piston, but would seal absolutely air-tight... As it turns out, the adjustable seals are already very air-tight; this however may change with time due to seal compression... It's something I will have to monitor and decide about in time, but it does not present any great obstacle to me.

"...Also, do not forget that most likely you will end up with the ultra low size of back chamber when the vertical back wall sitting to the driver magnet will form already too large chamber. What you might end up doing is to glue to the back of the slideable wall a space-killing indentation that would have a contra-template of the Fane driver. This would effectively to push out the air from the driver sided..."
 
Yes, this is exactly the plan, once ready to integrate the mid-bass horns. I currently have the horns tuned for 115Hz, which puts the piston somewhere in the middle of its stroke (This was not completely the result of luck; I did some calculations to get a feel for the volume before deciding on the dimensions of this chamber; I did not at the time trust my understanding of the formula).

"...I would put even some filing into the driver frame’ holes…"

Once I have the mid-bass horns, my thoughts are to start rolling off the lower end of the upper-bass horns somewhere around 200-240Hz, meaning I would probably tune the upper-bass horns for the same 200-240Hz. At that frequency you may be right; a really small back chamber volume may be necessary.

"...Also, turned John Hasqiun to your, Jessie, project and he pointed a very valuable point that you might overlooked. He suggested that this design shell have a way to vent the back chamber as it being adjusted, otherwise he will over or under pressurize the woofer cone and damage it..."

No, I did not overlook this detail... If you go back to the photos of the piston, you will see a little brass bleeder valve (read the captions under the photos for more explanations).

"...Going for exponential midbass is probably good idea; most likely I would do the same if I go for 50Hz horn..."

Well I have been considering Hyperbolic/Exponential because... Mainly because I seem to remember it is somewhat shorter than pure exponential, while offering other advantages, which have slipped my mind (it's been about a year and a half since doing research for the conception of this horn). Hang on a minute...

Daniel J. Plach (AES E-Library) wrote:
"...The use of hyperbolic-exponential horns makes possible practically any desired resistance or reactance characteristic near cutoff. The hyperbolic-exponential horn allows much more uniform transmission down nearer to cutoff than is possible with the exponential type..."

???

"...You might consider to make the double-action midbass horns. What I mean is that pretend that you horn is 8 feet. So, you make the first 5 feet from the throat is firm and solid and the last , the most larger 3 feet, detachable and perhaps with odd edge profile. The next time you move and realize that your horn would block your entrance in bathroom, or the corner of the horn blocks a half of your window and look to prominent on the room then you juts change the termination part of the horn…"

Yes this is probably a good idea, but I may have a difficult time with it knowing that 1/3 of the horn is missing. Also, I am free to base future real estate decisions on the dimensions of the finished system. One very real constraint is making sure the parts will all pass through the door of the place where the horns will be built.

Construction plan :
In order to make the walls of the horns rigid enough, without going into the kind of weight that only cranes can move, I have decided to make the flare (everything down stream of the driver mounting plane) like a surf board; meaning from a composite sandwich consisting of a double layer of glass fiber, then 2" of rigid urethane foam, then another two layers of glass fiber. The result should be a fairly light-weight non-resonant structure. The back chamber (meaning everything up stream of the driver mounting plane) will be made using the same materials that went into the other horns (hemp-reinforced refractory plaster, in this case, having a wall thickness of around 3").

"...It is very interesting to see what you do Jessie, in contrary to many audio people I know who just endlessly run their mouth on audio subjects you actually do the things..."

Well I will say that it does entail sacrifice, but what is being sacrificed in my case is really no big deal. One of the things I have been telling myself all throughout the course of this project was that (contrary to some of the other ball-and-chain projects with which I have burdened myself) this one will be a really nice thing to have should I manage to live to retire and grow gracefully old. Though I don't have a turn table, when you wrote about your "End of Life Phono Corrector", I understood exactly what the title meant.

jd*




How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-17-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 85
Post ID: 7837
Reply to: 7833
Cramped tweeter & frame aesthetics
Romy's quotes in blue:

"...It feels that there is very little room for the tweeter to breathe. It is not the narrow firing tweeter and I think you might give to it a little bit more room..."

Yes I was thinking the same thing, and the frame does offer plenty of space... The tweeter currently has an unobscured line of fire but only when not taking into account its vertical diffusion angle. I have difficulty ignoring vertical diffusion when projected along the depth of the tweeter's firing axis out past the mouth of the 180Hz horn.

To be honest, I started off with the Fundamentals horn much higher up; I then brought it down as low as possible. This was back in the days when I was over soliciting the Fundamentals horn and needed to get it lower (see previous posts).

"...The frame that holds the Fundamentals Channel is kind of odd esthetically. It looks like it was not from there. I do not know how bone-firm and how heavy your Fundamentals horn, but is it does need some support and cannot just to hang then you might consider to  use a harness around a horn and a single rod from the top of the frame to the horn. What I am trying to say that the support of the Fundamentals Channel might be more elegant…"

Uh... Wait a minute, the junction of the Fundamentals horn cradle with the main mast is (visually) my favorite part of the whole installation!... But I am more fascinated by bridges than by bird's nests.

I also have to admit to one of my fetishes : It's bad, but I tend to interpret purity of solution at that which incorporates consistency of logic. Having the same sort of mounting scheme for each horn, a mounting that employs the same logic but changes only in scale, is aesthetically pleasing to my tainted intellect (an all-horn system, all 1st order crossovers, etc). If I were to hang one horn, I would want to hang them all... Sick and completely idiotic I know.

That aside, I find the frame/horns/drivers to be a visually well balanced mass. Yes it is heavy-duty, and we are definitely very far from are the universe of "Fine Furnishings", but that's what turns me on... If I could have a suspension bridge or pair of oil derricks in the living room I probably would. Ironically or not, all this BS stems from a natural aversion to BS.

jd*



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-18-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,672
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 86
Post ID: 7838
Reply to: 7837
Sand man
Jessie, I love the way you have got it so you can EASILY move anything in any direction.  I imagine this will be a key in maintaining your sanity as you and your system evolve together.  And I agree with the form-follows function aesthetic, too.

I can say from experience that felt is a poor seal above 1 atmosphere.  Maybe you could saturate it with something that would remain +/- flexible?

The nice thing about using foam to shape the rear chamber is that you can drop in a greased negative form and just shoot the foam in.  I bought a Hilti foam gun ,and a can of their foam lasts a LONG time.  The excellent seal on the gun keeps the thing from getting hard while stored, so it's easy to just pick it up and use it whenever you want, and the gun makes it all very easy to control, believe it or not.

With respect to the ideas for a BIG horn, I wonder about dropping mass just where it's most useful.  Perhaps there is a way to make the thing in sections that can bolt together and then pour tar (or maybe even foam) something) between the sections when it's in situ?  Or, if the mating surafces can be controlled, maybe a couple of rows of 1/2 round rubber-ish gasket could be embedded in one edge to compress when the sections were bolted together?

Yes, seems fairly dead at higher frequencies, but not so fiberglass, as I found out when I made a tone arm from a fiberglass sail batten.  Of course, there is also the fill-with-sand option...  I can vouch for sand...  Now, that stuff is DEAD!

Best regards,
Paul S
07-21-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 87
Post ID: 7855
Reply to: 7838
Painless mid-bass horn (really!)

Paul,

Thanks for the comments.

I may have come up with a way of making the BIG horns fairly painlessly.

I found a place that sells large sheets of urethane foam in several thicknesses and several densities.
And, Its no big deal to find a place that can do laser cutting based on sections generated via a CAD program.

So the plan is to buy sheets of 4 inch thick low density foam, send it to the laser cutter and have them cut out sections (imagine the horn as a loaf of bread), which I would then glue together to achieve a rough horn shape, having a stepped transition every 4 inches.

These transitions could then easily be made to flow, by knocking off the peaks with a SurForm (cheese grater) file, and connecting or bridging from one glue joint to the next, making sure to leave the joints untouched by the file (as they are representative of the original section used to guide the laser cutter).

The resulting smoothed out foam horn could then be laminated with resin and glass fiber from both the inside and the outside. It would of course be too big to fit through the door, and laminating up inside the throat would be a pain, but this is just to illustrate the principal.

In practice I would have each section (which would look like a rectangular frame) cut into four "L" shaped pieces, making it possible to assemble just a quarter of a horn; an object of manageable dimensions, easy to attack with the SurForm file, as well as to laminate, because it is open (no crawling up into the throat). The quarters of the horn would then be bolted together to form the complete horn.

This is a moldless technique... The texture of the glass fiber will be apparent. The guys that used to make surf boards this way spent days sanding and filling in the texture so as to have a clean support onto which they would airbrush images of topless mermaids. Like the other horns, these will be paintd flat black; I will nevertheless keep the fiber glass work as neat as possible.

With regard to resonance, this technique may not yield the sort of "deadness" that masonry or really thick wood might give, but as the foam I've found is not the really rigid (and expensive) stuff, it should make quite a dead core, especially for its light weight.

jd*


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-23-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
chaos
Vienna
Posts 23
Joined on 06-27-2008

Post #: 88
Post ID: 7869
Reply to: 7855
Fiber horn...
hi jessie!
why you dont make it from carbonfiber on a foambase? carbonfiber is much easier to work than glassfiber and of course gives stiffer boards. im also just working on a "surfboard" horn, but i make the bent sides with layers of depron boards and carbon, should be stiff enough, at least stiffer than wood of reasonable thickness. will make 4 sides and glue it together. to get a nice surface is no big problem, but again, carbon is less work.

regards,klaus
07-23-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 89
Post ID: 7870
Reply to: 7869
Bass horn : Throat transition & construction.
I've continued thinking about construction since posting my previous laser-cut hallucination (titled "Painless mid-bass horn"...). 

Thinking mostly about the transition from round driver to rectangular horn...

I don't know how important it is at these sorts of frequencies, but I have an "aesthetisophical" problem with a driver firing directly into a square throat.



I would prefer a round throat that "transitions" to a rectangular section over the length of the horn. This was the main advantage offered by the laser-cut hallucination (BTW, cutting via hot wire is more appropriate when dealing with foam).

The image below shows one of what seems to be few rectangular horns where there is an attempt to make a transition from round to rectangular... You have to look deep into the dark throat of the left horn to see what I mean (these are Ulf's horns... Where are you Ulf... Did you manage to keep the girl?)

both.jpg

Below is a close up of the same horn with a phase plug.

plug.jpg

I would probably bring the transition all the way out to the mouth of the horn. The horn I am conceiving will have around a 7 inch throat... My thinking is to cut a 7 inch disc and use it as a template to "drag in" the fillets over the entire length of the horn :



I just feel this is right.


Klaus wrote :
"...why you dont make it from carbonfiber on a foambase?..."

Klaus,

Thanks for the suggestion.


Maybe things have changed, but thirteen years ago I priced a roll of woven carbon fabric; at that time it cost about the same as a small car.

"...im also just working on a "surfboard" horn, but i make the bent sides with layers of depron boards and carbon..."

I have continued to think about it since posting my previous laser-cut hallucination (titled "Painless mid-bass horn"...). With the exception of your choice of carbon, what you describe in the above quote is exactly one of two possible directions I had recently been considering. The only difference being that I was going to use glass fiber (because its cheap). I sort of abandoned it because the stacked-section approach facilitates incorporating the round-to-rectangular transition; you don't have to add it after the fact.

The other idea involves making the walls of the horn as follows:

1) Bend a thin sheet of plywood to a template (corresponding to the profile/curve of the horn), and clamp it in place

2) Glue several 3-inch-thick spacer blocks to the outside surface of the plywood and let the glue set

3) Glue another sheet of plywood to the spacer blocks and let the glue set

4) Drill holes in the out side sheet of plywood (the last one attached) and inject expanding foam completely filling the space between the two sheets of plywood

5) Add fillets in corners of horn by dragging circular template (see above) over a mix of resin and the maximum dose of microballoons (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_microsphere)

jd*



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-23-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 90
Post ID: 7871
Reply to: 7870
Better image of Ulf's horn

Here is a better shot of Ulf's horn... In this image, the object on the right is the core of the mold, which corresponds to the inner surface of the horn :

formar-klara.jpg


How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-24-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 91
Post ID: 7877
Reply to: 7836
Correction : Length hypex vs exponential
Romy wrote :
"...Going for exponential midbass is probably good idea; most likely I would do the same if I go for 50Hz horn..."

I responded :
"...I have been considering Hyperbolic/Exponential because... Mainly because I seem to remember it is somewhat shorter than pure exponential..."

I went on to list possible sonic advantages as well... See the original post here
: http://www.goodsoundclub.com/GetPost.aspx?PostID=7836&Phrase=Details%20Mid

But getting back to the length; I was apparently incorrect in remembering the hyperbolic/exponential profile to be shorter than pure exponential. I found the following image on the "Rocket Science Canada" web page.



The author(s) of the Rocket Science Canada site wrote :
"...The shortest curve is a Tractrix expansion. The middle is exponential, and the longest is an exponential/hyperbolic contour..."

This same site also contains some information that may be of interest to those looking to get a handle on the basics.
http://rocketsciencecanada.com/RocketScienceCanada/

jd*



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-24-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,184
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 92
Post ID: 7878
Reply to: 7877
A definitive assessment about long profiles.

Jessie,

When I spoke that I would go most likely for exponential I did not mean the Exponential vs. Hyperbolic but rather that it would not be a Tractrix. I have no specific preferences for Exponential, Hyperbolic or any other long profiles. A common sense suggests then the longer profiles shell be better for lower frequencies but in my case such a statements would not be backup by any of practical experiments. Frankly speaking even among the people who do use long horns it is also VERY difficult to make a definitive assessments about which long profile is better. At the “frequencies of the interest”  (40Hz-150Hz) the coupling with a specific room is way too important and it is virtually imposable to make an objective and methodologically clean assessment what profile is better even if someone one would have two identical long horns in the same room (can you image someone so courageous?!!)

So, if I was in your shoe I would discard whatever Romys and others say and would talk to the guys who build the horns. Talk to John Hasquine, talk to Jeffrey Jackson, talk to Bruce Edgar, talk to Martin Seddon, talk to the Le Cleach guy (I do not remember his name but he is your cosine and you shell know)  Bruce is particularly a subject of interest as he has a lot of practical and theoretical experience and he also personally has a very good discrimination for the results. You will not sense this discrimination if you will be his client, Bruce knows that his clients are mostly deaf idols who can’t distinguish results anyhow, but it does not mean that Bruce does not know how to make the things better and his advice would be voluble. Do not take anything that anyone say as the fact but rather use it as background to make you own decision.

You are engaged in a serious project. Why don’t you to let people to bid for the idea of your midbass horn. If I were you I would compile a resume of my being built acoustic system attached with request for people to come up with ideas of a “honest” 45-50Hz horn. I would even install some kind of prize for a most beneficial suggestion…  I would do in the end anyhow for whatever I personal would feel works out better but it does not mean that I would not listen many other who might some experience in the field…

The Cat.


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
07-24-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
chaos
Vienna
Posts 23
Joined on 06-27-2008

Post #: 93
Post ID: 7879
Reply to: 7870
Carbon...
its still expensive, but birch-plywood is not that much cheaper. its around 30-40 €/sqm. the only experience i have with a carbon-foam composite is from making a skateboard for my gf´s son. looks very good, but whats more important, absolutely rigid(he complained about it, feels bad when he is jumping down from a ramp, he fears loosing his theeth;-). made with to layers of unidirectional fiber on the bottom, probably to stiff for this application). and its sounds dead when you knock on it. dont know if this is good or bad, but i will never know before i try..
at least there are carbon-guitars out there, and their sound is not bad...
 i exactly unterstand your liking of a circular throat, but this is not that annoying for me. what i dont like is the fact, that the lenght of the sidewalls are different, more so if you have 2 flat sides. i imagine the the spherical wavefronts expand along the horn and suddenly on 2 sides the "leading surface" is gone. if size would be no problem i would try a round mouth. dont have a real reason, but i feel the mouth is as important as the throat, its where it is coupled to the room. this is the reason i asked romy if there is a problem with a quadratical mouth. would be closer to a circle than rectangular. but i will have to run the horn up to 400 hz, so maybe its better to get the center closer to earlevel. for me, there are a lot of questions, but if one thinks to much, then he will end up like this lynn olson, pages and pages of endless talk and no horns...
my horn will be a compromise anyway, it will look like ulf´s horn with 2 flat sides, and made from carbon-composite board. will see what the wavefronts think about it;-)
i am quite sure that a concrete horn horn sounds good, but i have also aesthatical reason for not liking it. for me its simply not elegant to kill resonances with mass, its something like:if you cant do it with elegance, use a hammer.

did you think about making a nice (quarter?)core from foam? its much easier to work on the cores outside than on a horns inside and should be no great deal to cover with glass- or carbonfiber. would be easy to cover the rounded parts with aramid-honeycombs, they are quite flexible.but you would need a vacuum-pump.

regards,klaus
07-24-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
tuga


Posts 174
Joined on 12-26-2007

Post #: 94
Post ID: 7881
Reply to: 7879
Carbon front baffle
Carbon is used by Audiotekne in a variety of products, from vinyl claps to a speaker with a 35mm carbon front baffle.
Some guys in Italy compared the same housing configuration built in wood using the same driver and they swear it's so much better but I have never listened to it myself.
Carbon's infinitely fine atomic structure of crystals makes it, as you say, a very inert material.

If you're looking for a light and inert material it would be interesting (and very complicated) to use LECA (light expanded clay aggregate) but you'd then have to cover the throat with some (sound) reflecting material.

Cheers,
Tuga


"Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira Pascoaes
07-24-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,184
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 95
Post ID: 7882
Reply to: 7881
I wonder how much unexplored out there!

Truly unexplored in the field of bass horns. There are zillion of new composite of syntactic light and very rigid material out there that might be a good candidates for building horns. People nowadays learned how to make good performing carbon fiber musical instruments like this for instances:

http://www.luisandclark.com

So, way do not leans hot to make “interesting” horn with proper balance of damping and “Resonance Oops” properties? I do not say that it is a good direction to think but the benefit would be so cool: to have a quick and light, literally collapsible bass horn that could be installed for a few seconds. It might be a wall ornamentation in living room during a “normal time” but when you wish to listen music a few walls might be unfold and the bass horn might be formed. I would even go for such a stupid idea as inflatable horn. Sure it will resonate; the inflatable resonances should be included into the design… somehow…

Anyhow, there are so many opportunities and unexplored interesting territories in bass horn design. No one unfortunately works on “divert options”.  I understand why… :-(

The caT


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
07-24-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
tuga


Posts 174
Joined on 12-26-2007

Post #: 96
Post ID: 7888
Reply to: 7882
To fight or to work with resonances
Working with (not against) material resonance would be an interesting alternative way but I would predict a long and strenuous path... Imagine yourself having to tune not (only) the strings of a cello but the instrument itself. :-D

I once owned a pair of resonant speakers w/ 5'' drivers and they sounded very "vibrant" with string instruments but unfortunately (though predictably) they were only fit for reproduction of maybe up to a sextet. It would be interesting to listen to a "singing" bass horn.

Cheers,
Tuga


"Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira Pascoaes
07-24-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,672
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 97
Post ID: 7890
Reply to: 7888
The lightweight division
I just remembered that I sometimes use a cementatious material that has added to it a fair amount of foam-ish beads and acrylic.  The stuff sets up like cement but is MUCH lighter than cement or plaster, perhaps 2/3 lighter.  I mention this because I still think moulding/forming with substantive inert material is the way to go.

I've never really sonically isolated fiberglass or carbon fiber in speaker horns, but I have done it with tonearms and enclosures.  Nor have I yet heard anything good coming from fiberglass or carbon fiber drivers.  FWIW, I think there are "better sounding" materials for those purposes.

The main problem with material resonances I've dealt with is that they are generally "signature" sounds, which means that they are usually best kept well in check.


Best regards,
Paul S
07-25-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 98
Post ID: 7894
Reply to: 7890
Decisions decisions
Thanks guys for all the suggestions.

Klaus wrote :
"...there are a lot of questions, but if one thinks to much, then he will end up like this lynn olson, pages and pages of endless talk and no horns..."

Very true, I need to get cracking, but I'm currently sort of stuck : I need a means of calculating for rectangular (I don't mean square) exponential horns.

I guess I could stop being lazy, and just extrapolate from the data given for square horns. I would imagine that in transforming a square horn to a rectangular horn, one need only maintain constant area for each section given for the square horn. In other words, take a section of a square horn that measures 2 X 2 feet; it will have an area of 4 square feet... To adapt this data for construction of a rectangular horn, it seems one could make that same section 1 X 4 feet, or 1.34 X 1.5 feet, or whatever, as long as the resulting area comes out to 4 square feet, and as long as the same height-to-width ratio is applied to all sections (there is probably a limit somewhere around the point where the mouth starts taking on the proportions of a slit).

The plan is to dimension the mouths of these horns such that they would contact the room on three sides; this means mouths that go from floor to ceiling and contact one side wall. So the long sides would stand about 8 feet tall, and the short sides would be whatever they need to be.

Never mind the fact that the current room does not allow for this sort of coupling (the ceiling is inclined and too high, and coupling with the side walls is not really possible)... This is a sort of "end of life horn system"; I will find it (us) a good home once the project is done.

Next step is to commit to a construction process and buy materials.

Romy wrote:
"...So, if I was in your shoe I would discard whatever Romys and others say and would talk to the guys who build the horns... Do not take anything that anyone say as the fact but rather use it as background to make you own decision..."

This is my intention. Advice, intuition, time ticking away, physical, financial and logistical considerations, illogical superstitions, they will all conspire to point me toward a decision.

Romy wrote:
"...So, way do not leans hot [why do we not learn how] to make “interesting” horn with proper balance of damping and “Resonance Oops” properties? I do not say that it is a good direction to think but the benefit would be so cool: to have a quick and light, literally collapsible bass horn that could be installed for a few seconds. It might be a wall ornamentation in living room during a “normal time” but when you wish to listen music a few walls might be unfold and the bass horn might be formed. I would even go for such a stupid idea as inflatable horn. Sure it will resonate; the inflatable resonances should be included into the design… somehow…"

Romy, dude, pass that Cohiba over here! I'm naive enough to think that I could tune a resonant horn wall to get a desired effect... This is one arguement against making the walls of the horn too thick. On the other hand part of me agrees with Paul and Tuga, when they mention that all resonance is best kept well in check. If I could, I'd probably make these horns as heavy as a gospel choir. Again, all this will weigh when deciding on construction method and materials.

Tuga wrote :
"...Carbon is used by Audiotekne in a variety of products, from vinyl claps to a speaker with a 35mm carbon front baffle. Some guys in Italy compared the same housing configuration built in wood using the same driver and they swear it's so much better..."

Which one do they claim to be better; wood or carbon?

Paul S wrote :
"...Nor have I yet heard anything good coming from fiberglass or carbon fiber drivers.  FWIW, I think there are "better sounding" materials for those purposes..."

Apart from harboring an ilogical reluctance toward the use of man-manipulated materials on this project, I will pass on carbon purely out of financial considerations. It's surprising that one pair of 45-50Hz horns (made from two layers of carbon + foam + two layers of carbon), would require more than one complete 100m roll of carbon. At 40€/m X 100m, we are into the sort of cash that I'd rather put toward real estate (the kind with enough space to properly install such horns); what's more, we would probably need an additional half roll of carbon to finish the job.

The quickest and most cost-effective way to increase rigidity in a composite-sandwich (provided one has the space) is to increase the thickness of the middle part, in this case, the foam within the sandwich; alternatively, generous stiffening ribs might be molded onto the outer surface.

Paul S wrote :
"...I sometimes use a cementatious material that has added to it a fair amount of foam-ish beads and acrylic.  The stuff sets up like cement but is MUCH lighter than cement or plaster, perhaps 2/3 lighter.  I mention this because I still think moulding/forming with substantive inert material is the way to go..."

Sounds like what we (over here) call aerated concrete, which I used in the form of pre-cast blocks to make the lower bass enclosures. Yes it's way lighter than normal concrete, but still ended up with over 500 lbs of blocks in each enclosure. The best part is... I get to do it all again! One of the enclosures has developed cracks (I think the blocks were defective; the other enclosure is fine). The new versions will use double plywood walls, spaced for sand filling.

Thanks again,

jd*



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-25-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
jessie.dazzle


Paris, France
Posts 456
Joined on 04-23-2006

Post #: 99
Post ID: 7895
Reply to: 7894
Off by a factor of 10
Oops... Ok, I admit it, I was up all night with an Excel-based profile generator.

I wrote :
"...I will pass on carbon purely out of financial considerations... At 40€/m X 100m, we are into the sort of cash that I'd rather put toward real estate (the kind with enough space to properly install such horns)..."

I miscalculated and came up with a roll cost of 40,000€, when in fact its more like 4,000€... Still not cheap, but not enough to make much of a dent if shopping for real estate.


jd*



How to short-circuit evolution: Enshrine mediocrity.
07-25-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
tuga


Posts 174
Joined on 12-26-2007

Post #: 100
Post ID: 7897
Reply to: 7895
Carbon superiority
Jesse wrote :
"Which one do they claim to be better; wood or carbon?"
Carbon

Jesse,

Looking back I realize my writing wasn't as clear as it should have been, sorry about that.
I have found and added image of the carbon baffle.

Another interesting product to look into is polyurethane foam in spray that hardens when dry. It would have to be used with an internal frame, similar to reinforced concrete's metal structure.

http://www.mit.jyu.fi/mweber/blog/images/Polyurethane_foam_panel.jpg


"Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira Pascoaes
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