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Re: Pro 4 + seven midhorn and tweeter [message #51032 is a reply to message #51030] |
Tue, 01 May 2007 09:03 |
beto1
Messages: 36 Registered: May 2009
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Baron |
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Hi dB, thanks for the link. Very impressive products. Here we have also phenolic plywoods used for concrete work (now I'm use it) , but I'm affraid that ours are made with pine. The point is , as far as I know, veneers fibers homogenity to avoid unwanted voids. I will check tomorrow at work, how good can be our phenolic boards for speakers matters. Having also MDF here, of course, it will be a nonsense import baltic birch or othe fine board, by the way. Maybe we can add some sealing product before apply the venners to increase moisture protection. Also, we can use some poliurethane treatment over the venners to add the wanted finish and protection. Best for you. p.s. wich Pi speakers do you have or proyect it?
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Re: Pro 4 + seven midhorn and tweeter [message #51034 is a reply to message #51033] |
Tue, 01 May 2007 18:23 |
beto1
Messages: 36 Registered: May 2009
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Baron |
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Hi, yes, also I have used marine plywood. The only downside is the voids, as Wayne stated as a prossible problem. If I can get a plywood with no voids in its veneers I will get it, but I don't believe that I can find here made in pine. Pine has more separate fibers, so is easy to chip, ergo we have voids. MDF, as I have noted is a very wood material with some limitations, moisture and poor mechanical to use with heavy drivers, but we can control this with some products and also we can use a plywood or a wood board for the front panel to fix the drivers, then we can do a sandwish to get an interior MDF layer (just a thought). I will check also for the CNC labor, but maybe will be sufficient with a router. Best regards
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Re: Pro 4 + seven midhorn and tweeter [message #51046 is a reply to message #51034] |
Fri, 04 May 2007 05:39 |
dB
Messages: 234 Registered: May 2009
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Master |
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Good. (What country is yours, if you don't mind me asking?) Do you mean they don't have too many types of wood there? When you use (glue) different types they may warp, unless you make a sandwich. Note: Also, I was thinking in good wood from old buildings (villas) like the planks from the stairs (and wide-plank flooring & windows, old and well dry) sometimes in exotic wood. Sometimes you may have a second resource beside new wood. They are now using old wine casks for speakers, recycled. you can also read this interesting paper (in making guitars, I didn't read it yet): The Quest for Tone http://www.mtdbass.com/articles/quest_for_tone.pdf (pic. from http://uk.gizmodo.com/2006/07/11/pioneer_pure_malt_speakers.html)
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Re: Pro 4 + seven midhorn and tweeter [message #51047 is a reply to message #51046] |
Fri, 04 May 2007 19:10 |
beto1
Messages: 36 Registered: May 2009
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Baron |
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Hi dB, I'm in Chile, where are u? Here we have a lot of wood, specially at South provinces. We export a lot of wood, well also very good red wine, btw. But I don't have good luck with plywood boards, because are made with just pine. Ihave inspect the phenolic plywoods at my work, and is a lot more homogenic that common plywood, but still have some voids. I like a lot the building restoration work, recycling old extremely beatufull wood developed from old houses. Some architects use some portion of interior naked wood frames, puting away the wall cover (clay in some cases), getting visual continuity spaces. There are lot of (now very expensive, but 100 or more years ago, that was normal) old houses waiting with its treasures inside the walls and on stairs and others elements. I have work with recycled wood on modern clay houses using wood frame. Earth is a very good material. Maybe some of this woods can work fine for speakers needs. The question is wich ones, because I know that some speakers builders talk about the enclosure as instruments that need the fine tuning of the aproppriate wood in the way that luthiers talk about fine artisanal instruments. I don't think that all beatifull wood can serve to our purpose because we need to avoid unwanted resonances, as far as I know. Thats why the no-at-all-aristocratic MDF was a good speaker material. Maybe there are some fine examples of exotic wood that can stole the place of the proletarian MDF, but who knows if worth. Best wishes
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