pi seven top horns? [message #65526] |
Mon, 03 January 2011 11:53 |
artsybrute
Messages: 56 Registered: May 2009
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Baron |
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Hi Wayne and all,
I've been away from the forums for about a decade or so. I built the Pi Seven cornerhorns way back and love them. But back then I built the bass boxes and have been using lowther PM6A's in 36 inch front horns for the rest.
At this point where I want to take the lowther setups out of the equation and finish the sevens. (Yeah I know: I move really fast.)
But when I went to the product site, I saw the sevens seem to no longer have the mid and HF drivers dropped into the doghouse, but directionally adjustable in little horns on top. That looks really nice.
Could you please point me to a place that explains this development?
Also, could you please send me plans for the top horns?
Thanks.
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Re: pi seven top horns? [message #65528 is a reply to message #65526] |
Mon, 03 January 2011 13:54 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18786 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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The bass bin of the π cornerhorn has remained unchanged since it was introduced in 1980, but the midrange and tweeter have changed over the years. I've used direct radiating mids and horn-loaded mids, and for a few years even experimented with making the system as a two-way speaker.
The midrange is different than lower and higher frequencies because of acoustic scale. At low frequencies, the woofer is close enough to the walls that the room's corner acts like a large waveguide, at least down to the Schroeder frequency where room modes set the pattern. At high frequencies, the tweeter horn sets the pattern. But the midrange frequencies are sort of in a transition region in terms of acoustic scale. The midrange driver isn't usually close enough to be within a 1/4λ, so the walls act as a reflector instead of a waveguide, with all the attendant self-interference issues.
In 2003, I designed a midrange horn specifically to address this situation. I wanted it to do a couple things, first, to provide constant directivity in the same pattern as the woofer and tweeter and second, to be able to be run low enough to blend with the woofer to smooth floor bounce, much like vertical arrays do. Of course, these requirements make a physically large horn, even when designed for 1/8th space loading (at least at the bottom end where it needs it). So instead of putting the midrange driver in the bass bin, I moved it on top and cradled the tweeter on top of that. Works out great with respect to height too, putting the midhorn and tweeter roughly at ear level.
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