Damping H290C horn [message #76902] |
Sat, 01 June 2013 09:12 |
vandevoordekoen
Messages: 18 Registered: January 2013
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Chancellor |
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Hello,
Recently, I built a pair of 4Pi speakers, that sound wonderful to me!
However, I read in a review (on this site) that the horns have to be damped to avoid the "plastic" treble sound. Is there a way to damp the H290C horn? I read a lot about rope caulk, but in Europe we don't use that. Would flashing tape help to damp the horn?
Or it there another way?
Thank you very much!
(Sometimes, it feels like the low frequencies of the 4pi's are a little bit too present. Especially when you hear voices in movies. I live in a little apartment, would it hurt to attenuate the bass a little bit?)
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Re: Damping H290C horn [message #76903 is a reply to message #76902] |
Sat, 01 June 2013 09:52 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18789 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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Bill Epstein is a big fan of using rope caulk to surround the horn. Some people do that to other horns too, and it sure doesn't hurt anything. If you don't have rope caulk, use modeling clay. Rope caulk is pretty similar stuff.
As for the bass, did you line the cabinet with fiberglass insulation? More importantly, did you put a sheet on the braces, spanning the cross-section, separating the woofer and tweeter? This is an important step, putting the damping material in the cabinet properly.
If you have done that, the problem is probably room interactions. I would suggest running flanking subs. It may seem counterintuitive that adding bass speakers would help smooth the bass, but it does. And the flanking sub approach in particular smoothes the range where you hear the lowest part of male voices and things like that. I notice it most in male voices, sometimes female too, acoustic guitar, cello and piano.
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