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Conical horn to the rescue! [message #43452] Wed, 24 December 2003 07:30 Go to next message
Mike.e is currently offline  Mike.e
Messages: 471
Registered: May 2009
Illuminati (1st Degree)

I was trying to get a nice response for my JBL 15" in hornresp,and look whats best! conical horn !

its like the underdog of horns=
People proclaim the magic of tractix mid, and expo/hyp bass,, and the poor conical gets left behind outside PI circles...

No the jbl horn isnt small- that rear chamber just cant be reduced !
so il build my LAB12 horn next,as the rear chamber is very tiny,and the entire horn small

but i Do want to build the jbl horn :-P

Other news:
RS SPL meter , waiting for delivery(it is xmax after all)
enough money for lab12 very soon.. :-)

Re: Conical horn to the rescue! [message #43453 is a reply to message #43452] Wed, 24 December 2003 09:12 Go to previous message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18791
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

I agree with you about conical horns. They're simple and effective. Everything has strengths and weaknesses, but for the midbass up through the vocal range, I think this sort of horn is best.

Midrange frequencies don't require large horns, so even if one needs to be slightly oversized, this isn't a problem. It helps reduce any peaking on the bottom end, and ensures directivity is maintained at low frequencies. A conical horn is easy to build, and offers excellent dispersion characteristics and low distortion. And the response curve is nice, especially if the horn is made large, baffle mounted or used in groups.

Midbass horns require more space, but they are designed to be used in constrained space such as a corner, or they are designed to be used in groups. When such a horn must be used in freespace, it is generally expected that it be used in conjunction with others. So what we really are talking about are truncated horns. This essentially means that the cabinet and it's horn path form the throat, and that the mouth is actually formed by the environment. The expansion into the room is actually the mouth. Your room's corner becomes a part of the horn.

When you think about it, the throat of an exponential or hyperbolic horn approximates a conical flare. And the further back towards the diaphragm you go, the more the horn's expansion resembles a conical flare. It looks almost like a straight pipe from the radiator, and then as the wavefront progresses further out the pipe, it begins to expand more and more as an exponential flare.

So when you put a highly truncated horn into a corner, you're really using something that resembles a nearly straight conically flared pipe. The corner itself forms the rest of the flare. Of course, without this constrained space, the horn would become excessively peaky. But that's the nature of the truncated flare just as much as anything else.

There are many ways to build a good system, but I think that taking advantage of this arrangement is one of the very best.


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