Port Location Question for Towers [message #42944] |
Fri, 07 November 2003 07:14 |
GarMan
Messages: 960 Registered: May 2009
|
Illuminati (2nd Degree) |
|
|
I'm having some problem deciding where my port should go on the Pi Towers. Wayne has mentioned that it doesn't matter whether its on the front or back, so long as there's room to breath. If the port is cut on the rear baffle, how far away will the speaker need to be from the wall. Due to the Tower's size, I'd like to be able to place the speaker as close to the wall as possible. Feedback from owners of "stock" Towers? If the port is cut on the front, would it be a problem if it's cut in mid-baffle (approx 6" below woofer)? I'd want the option to put things in front of the speakers. thanks, gar.
|
|
|
|
Would you say . . . [message #42948 is a reply to message #42945] |
Fri, 07 November 2003 10:29 |
Tightwad
Messages: 41 Registered: May 2009
|
Baron |
|
|
. . . rear-firing makes the speaker more sensitive to room placement? I've got Paradigm Minimonitors with rear-firing ports, and placement is always a compromise between bass (i.e. closer to wall) and clarity/imaging/etc (i.e. more into the room). I didn't notice such a distinction with my previous speakers which had front-firing ports. That is, does rear-firing make it easier to get more bass by using boundaries?
|
|
|
|
Re: Would you say . . . [message #42950 is a reply to message #42948] |
Fri, 07 November 2003 11:20 |
|
Wayne Parham
Messages: 18789 Registered: January 2001
|
Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
|
|
Assuming resonance around 50Hz, wavelength at the Helmholtz and fo frequencies is around 20 feet, so distances that are less than about 5 feet are pretty insignificant, acoustically. At this scale, the distance between a room boundary and the woofer is about the same as the distance between the boundary and the port; The difference is probably less than 5 feet. So the room boundary should act the same on sound coming from the woofer and from the port.I'm sure there are some applications where the two are decoupled; I've seen a few designs where the port doubles as part of a Helmholtz resonator and also as a sort of truncated horn. But in general, the woofer and port are treated as forming a system and their inter-relationships are intimately combined. Certainly, midrange output from the cone acts differently in relationship to room boundaries than does the bass output from the port. But the bass output from the cone and the bass output from the port - within an octave of each other - interact with the room in pretty much the same way.
|
|
|
|
|
|