Home » Audio » Speaker » Need suggestions for a lower range horn to mate with new Mid/High horns
Need suggestions for a lower range horn to mate with new Mid/High horns [message #59521] |
Thu, 25 June 2009 14:56 |
noviygera
Messages: 23 Registered: June 2009 Location: United States
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Chancellor |
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First off, hello to everyone and to Wayne. Wayne, I had the pleasure of talking to you once on the phone, probably a year ago. We talked about you constant dir. midrange horn. I made one, by the way.
This is my first post here.
I have a DJ/listening system in my basement. Mostly, self made.
(I had JBL 2470 for mids and 2405 tweeter)
Some pictures:
http://picasaweb.google.com/noviygera/BasementSystem#
Just recently i installed NEW Funktion-One RES 1.5HS horns.
(I believe I'm the first one in the US to have these!)
Pictures:
http://picasaweb.google.com/noviygera/FunktionOne#
My current system:
18" subs on H open baffles (Eminence drivers)
10" Rola on open baffles (really old drivers)
5" RES 1.5 HS (Funktion-One): 25v x 90h degree coverage.
Digital crossover by DBX Driverack PA, 200 HZ, 630Hz.
Eq is "flat" above 600Hz. RES 1.5 HS sound very good this way.
Some eq used for midbass(minor, +/-2db) and subs(some heavy eq below 100Hz).
At this point I would like to move to a mostly horn system, adding a midbass horn to cover up to 600Hz, where it will cross over to the Mid/High horn. I'd like to start by replacing the 10" Rola on open baffle.
So, I'm looking for a Mid bass horn to go up to 600Hz.
Should I make one or get a used one somewhere?
My priority is sound quality over output.
You may notice (in the second link above) I made one constant directivity horn, per Wayne's plans. But I made just one and I think it will not go down to 150Hz like I need.
TWO options I came up with:
The crossover point will be 530 to 600Hz. the RES 1.5 midhigh is 18" x 10" x 9" deep.
Keeping in mind, I'm trying to cover 600Hz and below... Given space constraints of a medium size basement room...
1st option is to get the 10N Pro midbass horn. It 17" x 21" x 10" deep. Freq resp: 250Hz-1.6kHz
http://www.ddshorns.com/catalog.php?page=DMB10NPro
I will then need to get an appropriate 10" mid, make a box and mount the midbass horn UNDERNEATH the Res1.5 midhigh. Seems reasonable.
2nd option is to get one of these: DVB 15H or DVB 15N Pro:
http://www.ddshorns.com/catalog.php?page=DVB15H
http://www.ddshorns.com/catalog.php?page=DVB15NPro
DVB 15H is 22" x22" x 5.75" deep, Freq resp: 60Hz - 1.25kHz
DVB 15N Pro is 22" x 22" x 15" deep, Freq resp: 60Hz - 800Hz
both will require a 15" driver instead of the 10" but size wise they are not that much bigger (5" taller)
...and to mount the the Res1.5 midhigh COAXIALLY, in the center of the big horns. Remember, the mid high mouth is 16" x 8", the mibass mouth is 22" x 22". Is this a GOOD IDEA? The question is will the midhigh create a shadow, or block the sound of themidbass driver and horn. It it worth emulating a single point source or will the drawbacks be to great?
Attaching a sketch of my concept. Will the directivity difference at 500 Hz cause a problem?
-Herman
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Re: Need suggestions for a lower range horn to mate with new Mid/High horns [message #59524 is a reply to message #59523] |
Thu, 25 June 2009 16:44 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18787 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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I understood you cannot use corners. I find most cases, corner loading isn't an option. I merely mentioned it to clarify that the midhorn used in the six π and seven π loudspeakers is actually too small to be used in freespace.
The main thing I wanted to show was the link to the earlier thread with a couple of Hornresp models and brief instruction how to model a horn. You could perhaps use that as a starting point.
Coaxials have never held my fascination because they solve one problem by causing another that I think is worse. Whatever you do in a coaxial arrangement, something is compromised. Usually the inner horn is too small, and suffers poor loading and pattern control. This gives ripples on and off-axis. If the inner horn is made large enough, it tends to obstruct the outer horn, leaving a hole in the pattern on-axis. Some configurations have been used that pack a driver or array of drivers along the side walls, but this creates multiple reflections and even in its best trim, it's really hard to get the summing right. Any shifts cause whatever alignment is provided cold to be misaligned hot. So none of these kinds of coaxial or coentrant arrangements are very attractive to me.
There is one thing that a coaxial or coentrant horn does well, one problem it solves. There is no vertical offset between the sound sources. So if you need a tall vertical pattern, you have the possibility to get one using a speaker arrangement like this. The thing is, I can't see much use for a tall vertical pattern and the price you pay to get it takes that option off the table for me. But if you need tall vertical coverage, it might be useful. It also makes for nice convenient packaging.
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