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so nobody has heard the speakers in the link?
http://www.theaudioinsider.com/produ...d28f98c30133d6 "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message .. . Soundhaspriority wrote: "George M. Middius" cmndr _ george @ comcast . net wrote in message ... Soundhaspriority said: It does sound exactly like the White Van stuff. The shipping weight is 72 lbs for the pair. That means that each speaker weighs around 30 lbs. This is featherweight. It's impossible to make an inert cabinet that light. Oh really? http://www.bytesizedreviews.com/index.php?rev_id=39 They're fleecing you ![]() Just my intuition, since I'm not a speaker designer, but I get the impression that the sound pressures inside a speaker cabinet, at mid-bass and below, require very dense material. MDF is actually said to be better than plywood, because it's denser. The stuff you mention above is a sound absorber, but I don't think it can achieve the inertification of a speaker cabinet by itself. **"Inertification"? Nice. Points: * "Pressure" is rarely an issue. * Vibration reduction is the key. Many years ago, Celestion with it's SL600 speaker system showed that heavy cabinets were not necessary for good reporduction. They used stuff called "Aerolam". Very light, very rigid and very non-resonant. The advantage of a low mass cabinet material is that if it does start to resonate, then it is easy to stop it from doing so. Heavy material require more damping. With only a very few exceptions, descriptions of speaker anatomy I've seen describe the cabinet in terms of eithe MDF, or more sophisticated composites, but the layers are very dense. **Indeed. Composites are my favourites. So-called 'constrained layer' construction works very well. Something like a laminated car windscreen, where you have two rigid layers, separated by a 'squishy' layer. The squishy layer dissipates (theoretically) any vibration. I proved the theory to myself back in the early 1970s. I built some T-line enclosures (from Bailey designs) out of 3/4" chipboard. I used them for about a year and was happy. I then decided it was time to make them look nice, so I glued laminate to them. The sound improvement was astonishing and completely unexpected. I use something like the "fleece" in my computer cabinets. It's a composite of two different density foams. It seems to take the edge off. **I like sheep's wool, but it is expensive. Far more absorbent than man-made fibres. Trevor Wilson -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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