These speakers are beautiful.
I cant even begin to ask where you start to come up with a folding scheme like that.
I guess you start with one fold and keep going untill your brain is in a knot!
Grats on the elegant solution, keep listening.
Well It was a little simpler, there where only the knots that where there before, Ha ha. Actually I started with a strait horn that was tuned to what I needed and
then I used the dimentions and solved it on paper( I 'm a good draftman, since my Mercedes apprenteship days in the early 60's ). where there is a will there is a way, right!
thanks Etocynned
Dear Bushhorns,
I' m glad that there are more people that love horns and are also crazy enough to build complex cabinets like the wonderful Autographs (yours seems more like Westminster to me) but I always recommend that, if one is going to pass through all the troubles to build a complex horn, then make it big enough...I have made the full-size Autograph (which I don't change for the gold of Peru) and a 2/3 down-sized replica for the AN super10 (which I had to mod to get better bass). Front and back loaded horns complement well the natural Frequency Response of the full-range drivers, reinforcing the midrange and bass, respectivelly, to get an even FR. The "point source" classic cabinets got the sound radiation just right.
The problem with full-range speakers is that they sound so marvelously natural than one gets used to and/or forgives its drawbacks. There is nothing like a "too big bass horn", hehe.
Keep on the good work.
M.
I' m glad that there are more people that love horns and are also crazy enough to build complex cabinets like the wonderful Autographs (yours seems more like Westminster to me) but I always recommend that, if one is going to pass through all the troubles to build a complex horn, then make it big enough...I have made the full-size Autograph (which I don't change for the gold of Peru) and a 2/3 down-sized replica for the AN super10 (which I had to mod to get better bass). Front and back loaded horns complement well the natural Frequency Response of the full-range drivers, reinforcing the midrange and bass, respectivelly, to get an even FR. The "point source" classic cabinets got the sound radiation just right.
The problem with full-range speakers is that they sound so marvelously natural than one gets used to and/or forgives its drawbacks. There is nothing like a "too big bass horn", hehe.
Keep on the good work.
M.
This is a new cornerhorn design
A picture says more than a 1000 words!
Klaus
real good looking if you ignore the ears, Ho ho ho.
A picture says more than a 1000 words!
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
Klaus
real good looking if you ignore the ears, Ho ho ho.
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