biglaz Messages: 32 Registered: May 2009 Location: Kentucky
Baron
Wayne,
I received the (2) Mid Horn flat packs from UPS yesterday. Opened them this AM. Extremely well packed with your expanding foam on the corners. (You must like the expanding foam because I remember you used it to fill the cavity of I believe the 10Pi.) Anyway, no damage.
For any forum member thinking about this flat pack do not hesitate. It took only about 30 minutes to assemble both horns, no drivers yet. All the dowels lined up and if you follow the number code you can not mess up. Can't wait to mount the drivers and give them a listen.
FYI. I attempted to build this horn twice. Even though I ended up with reasonable facsimiles they were just not right.
Wayne Parham Messages: 18789 Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)
Glad they arrived OK. And you're right, you have a good memory, I've used that same kind of foam to fill dead air spaces on speaker cabinets. Works very well as a foam-in-place packaging material too, protecting those sharp corners. The tips of the midhorn's top and bottom panels will punch right through most other kinds of fill.
Bane2871 Messages: 7 Registered: August 2011 Location: United States
Esquire
Just received the midhorn flatpack. Does anyone who has done these have any construction tips? They look like one of those projects that appear fairly straight forward but end up being pretty tricky. Any thoughts?
Wayne Parham Messages: 18789 Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)
The Miller dowel pins are included. They're just sitting in throat hole cutout, sandwiched in between side panels. If you use them to pin the horn together you won't need to cradle the horn while the glue sets. Just put white glue on every surface, assemble the horn and tap the pins in.
Wayne Parham Messages: 18789 Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)
It's a pretty heavily visited thread, one that gets referenced often. I suppose we could make it a sticky, but I think it gets enough attention anyway. We just keep bringing it back up, as needed.
Wayne Parham Messages: 18789 Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)
It depends on the thickness of the veneer. If you're using thin veneer, you can cover the entire side before assembly. But thick veneers will create enough offset the pieces won't fit together well so you have to trim to fit. On those, it's best to cut the veneer to size before assembly, but don't actually attach it until after assembly. Honestly, the thinner veneers are easier to use for the flare pieces. Save the thicker stuff for the cabinet sides.
Hi Wayne, any thoughts about offering a 100hz front loaded horn??? I have 350hz edgarhorns and 4 good subs that will easily go up to 100hz.....just need to fill that gap. Dennis.