Request...plans [message #66070] |
Thu, 10 February 2011 09:11 |
Slybean
Messages: 7 Registered: February 2011
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Esquire |
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Hi Wayne,
I would like to built my first Horn speakers. Is it possible to get the plans of the eight pi speakers? Is it the model you would recommand...
regards
s
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Re: Request...plans [message #66093 is a reply to message #66092] |
Fri, 11 February 2011 18:33 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18787 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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Yes, the midhorn does control the pattern from the crossover point down. It is required when using midwoofers smaller than 12" because otherwise, the midwoofer pattern is wide up to a higher frequency, too wide, in my opinion. So the midhorn limits the coverage angle up to the crossover point.
However, it is important to realize that even direct radiating drivers become directional at high frequencies. A 12" midwoofer presents as narrow a beamwidth as the midhorn does at about 1.2kHz and a 15" midwoofer is as narrow by about 1.0kHz. This makes them blend real nicely with the tweeter in this region, and is the basis of the matched-directory loudspeaker design philosophy.
On the other hand, the midhorn does one thing the direct radiator cannot do, which is to maintain constant directivity below the crossover point. The pattern of direct radiators widens as frequency drops, whereas the midhorn pattern remains constant. However, it really needs "reinforcement" from corner placement to maintain pattern control all the way down through its passband. If it is placed in freespace, it can only maintain pattern control for about an octave below crossover.
If you're using the eight π speaker outside corners, it's pretty much the same as the matched-directivity models, the three π and four π models. Beamwidth is wide at low frequencies, then as the horn gains pattern control it narrows, approximating the flare angle. If you put the speaker in a corner, it acts more like the six π or seven π cornerhorns, with the corner setting the pattern down low. It is sort of like an entry-level cornerhorn model, but can be used outside of corners too.
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