Use of Felt, and Speaker Alignment in an Optimal Cabinet.

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Hi dave,

i would have preferred a vertical "in line" arrangement of
woofer and tweeter.

Since this is to be a nearfield monitor, with your 45 degree
arrangement one is free to put the speaker vertically or
horizontally and get similar dispersion in both positions.

Is this what you intended ?
Or just increase of asymmetry for the tweeter ?

45 degrees not fixed in stone, or even intended. I usually line up the outside of the tweeter bezel with the edge of the midwoofer (except that most of my speakers don't have tweeters 🙂). Gives a more compact vertical alignment with little effect on the horizontal, gives more assymettry for the tweeter to the edges, and gives more range of geometry with placement left or right and with toe-in.

dave
 
mmm well, I am going to go to the garage now, and drill the holes. I will save the offset woofer idea for another set when I can actually test what offsetting does... later when I have real measuring equipment, etc... I just can't do something like, offset the woofer a certain amount without measuring it myself to see what will actually happen, I can see that other people do, and have done it, after measuring it all and getting it perfect, but I can't see why I would do it myself, at least right now, ... this is being my second speakers ever made. I don't want to make a mistake after all my hard work.

I am assuming these speakers will be accurate enough with the standard 'tweeter over woofer lined up vertically, with a good space top and bottom alignment that seems to be what everyone else does... I would like to try the offset woofer, but I don't trust myself and my skill enough to do it right now.
 
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