GM said:You in SF also?
Howdy GM, yes! I am lucky to live near Phil. I'm on the wrong side of the tracks though.
Good to know, between being fed up with 'Hotlanta' in general and in particular how its changing climate is increasingly affecting my health, I've been giving some thought to moving and Santa Fe is on my list of choices. Like you, I imagine I'll be on the 'wrong side of the tracks' as I've been most of my life regardless of where I land, though some of it was my choice to give me more time/$$$ for what's really important, my hobbies 😉 (once any kids are accounted for of course).
GM
GM
Hi GM, good to hear! You will just need to adjust SoS for the 7,000+ foot altitude.
OT: Even though winter can be cold, the sun is warmer at the high altitude and that takes the edge off, in my mind. Also, in winter, if you have a wood stove or fireplace insert, it's toasty. The smell of the local pinon wood is addictive.
Starting next month, they will be roasting green chiles all over town -- another addictive smell. I like Santa Fe because it's a small, manageable town with lots of history, high desert, mountain areas, some rivers, low humidity, and there are a fair number of vintage cars because things don't rust much (no road salt).
There's an almost endless supply of museums, galleries, concerts, the opera, restaurants, natural hot springs, etc. Rail service to Albuquerque is almost finished, and you can always jump in the car and disappear into northern New Mexico's little towns and remote areas. I hope you keep it on your short list!
OT: Even though winter can be cold, the sun is warmer at the high altitude and that takes the edge off, in my mind. Also, in winter, if you have a wood stove or fireplace insert, it's toasty. The smell of the local pinon wood is addictive.
Starting next month, they will be roasting green chiles all over town -- another addictive smell. I like Santa Fe because it's a small, manageable town with lots of history, high desert, mountain areas, some rivers, low humidity, and there are a fair number of vintage cars because things don't rust much (no road salt).
There's an almost endless supply of museums, galleries, concerts, the opera, restaurants, natural hot springs, etc. Rail service to Albuquerque is almost finished, and you can always jump in the car and disappear into northern New Mexico's little towns and remote areas. I hope you keep it on your short list!
Woofer Tester
Hey RJ...
I just ordered the program from Parts Express...it and the 9Dnf's will arrive on Friday...
Do you know how to use it?
Phil
Hey RJ...
I just ordered the program from Parts Express...it and the 9Dnf's will arrive on Friday...
Do you know how to use it?
Phil
rjbond3rd said:
You will just need to adjust SoS for the 7,000+ foot altitude.
Yeah, the rest sounds great, but I had a hard enough time breathing in/around Sturgis S.D. which is only ~3x higher than Hotlanta, so may make it a non-starter.
BTW, for audio purposes altitude per se has no bearing on the SoS, it's the temp changes that affects it, so how hot/cold the driver's/speaker's environs sets the SoS calcs.
GM
Re: Woofer Tester
Hi Phil, yes it's a snap! Do you have access to a Windows box? If not, let me know because I have one you can borrow if you like. Congrats on the drivers! How are your eNaBLed Harveys?!
Hi GM, oops, I don't even know enough to make a joke in this forum. 🙂 Thank you for the correction. It's true the air is thinner here. 🙁 Most people do adjust though.
Phil Townsend said:Do you know how to use it?Phil
Hi Phil, yes it's a snap! Do you have access to a Windows box? If not, let me know because I have one you can borrow if you like. Congrats on the drivers! How are your eNaBLed Harveys?!
GM said:BTW, for audio purposes altitude per se has no bearing on the SoS, it's the temp changes that affects it.GM
Hi GM, oops, I don't even know enough to make a joke in this forum. 🙂 Thank you for the correction. It's true the air is thinner here. 🙁 Most people do adjust though.
Win Box
I can run XP on my Mac....
The EnAbled are truly wonderful... Come by and give a listen...
Call me...466 7575
I can't find your number...
Phil
I can run XP on my Mac....
The EnAbled are truly wonderful... Come by and give a listen...
Call me...466 7575
I can't find your number...
Phil
bamboo cabinet-worlds smallest Feastrex cabinet project
the drivers mount in nicely. We will soon know if flush mounting changes anything. The driver itself is supported by a bolt through the back.
the inside corners of the box are also rounded to match the outside corners and the back is sloped. I'll start with no stuffing, just a Tozawa resonator and work from there.
Man! This bamboo wood is so rigid it makes the MDF cabinets seem like doughboys.
Will report more as we move along.
Regards
Brian
the drivers mount in nicely. We will soon know if flush mounting changes anything. The driver itself is supported by a bolt through the back.
the inside corners of the box are also rounded to match the outside corners and the back is sloped. I'll start with no stuffing, just a Tozawa resonator and work from there.
Man! This bamboo wood is so rigid it makes the MDF cabinets seem like doughboys.
Will report more as we move along.
Regards
Brian
Attachments
Re: Box sixe
hello Phil,
the net volume is 26 L. Baffle width is 34 cm and the height is 52 cm.
Regards
Brian
Phil Townsend said:Hi Brian...
Can you tell us the size and vol. of the box???
hello Phil,
the net volume is 26 L. Baffle width is 34 cm and the height is 52 cm.
Regards
Brian
Re: Size matters
the back is sloped but the average depth is 22 cm. so far I've found this driver likes wide baffles.
yes there is a port at the bottom back. port length starting point will be as suggested by the dreaded WinISD and later adjusted by actual in room measurements.
are you thinking of a second Feastrex system for your bedroom?
Brian
Phil Townsend said:Thanks Brian...
Two more things...
How deep is it and is there a port?
the back is sloped but the average depth is 22 cm. so far I've found this driver likes wide baffles.
yes there is a port at the bottom back. port length starting point will be as suggested by the dreaded WinISD and later adjusted by actual in room measurements.
are you thinking of a second Feastrex system for your bedroom?
Brian
Re: Win Box
Hi Phil,
I picked up the WT2 from S&L a while back (pretty sure they provide the one for Partsexpress). I also tried running it from XP running under Parallels on the MacBook Pro. Not a good setup as I had a constant clicking sound coming from the driver, most likely caused by timing sensitivities in the USB being virtualized to the VM session. Unless you're using Boot Camp (hence a native boot of XP on the Mac) you may have the same problem and the results will not be accurate. I wound up using an older ThinkPad running XP and everything was fine.
Regards, KM
Phil Townsend said:I can run XP on my Mac....
The EnAbled are truly wonderful... Come by and give a listen...
Call me...466 7575
I can't find your number...
Phil
Hi Phil,
I picked up the WT2 from S&L a while back (pretty sure they provide the one for Partsexpress). I also tried running it from XP running under Parallels on the MacBook Pro. Not a good setup as I had a constant clicking sound coming from the driver, most likely caused by timing sensitivities in the USB being virtualized to the VM session. Unless you're using Boot Camp (hence a native boot of XP on the Mac) you may have the same problem and the results will not be accurate. I wound up using an older ThinkPad running XP and everything was fine.
Regards, KM
Re: bamboo cabinet-worlds smallest Feastrex cabinet project
Not surprising. MDF is baked dough.
dave
bcherry said:This bamboo wood is so rigid it makes the MDF cabinets seem like doughboys.
Not surprising. MDF is baked dough.
dave
Also very interested to hear how the bamboo works out. I did the Moose BVRs in solid red oak which is pretty hard stuff (and somewhat hard to work with too). However, despite lots of internal bracing they still flex a bit. My simple non-scientific method is placing a glass of red wine on the top with music playing.... (okay, late in the evening after a nice meal and finishing the rest of a great Chianti). You can see the sound create ripples in the surface of the wine ;-)
Regards, KM
Regards, KM
Re: Re: Win Box
Hi kmaier, oddly enough, despite having an almost identical name, they seem to be different hardware, different software. But you are lucky because you got the better (albeit more expensive) one.
http://www.woofertester.com/
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/psho...R=woofer tester&CFID=7878974&CFTOKEN=18785531
kmaier said:I picked up the WT2 from S&L a while back (pretty sure they provide the one for Partsexpress)...
Hi kmaier, oddly enough, despite having an almost identical name, they seem to be different hardware, different software. But you are lucky because you got the better (albeit more expensive) one.
http://www.woofertester.com/
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/psho...R=woofer tester&CFID=7878974&CFTOKEN=18785531
At one time S&L did provide the WT2 to Parts Express. I'm not sure but I assume PE figured they could make an extra nickel per unit by knocking it off, hence the non-S&L WT3 . . .
kmaier said:
I did the Moose BVRs in solid red oak which is pretty hard stuff (and somewhat hard to work with too). However, despite lots of internal bracing they still flex a bit. My simple non-scientific method is placing a glass of red wine on the top with music playing....
Hmm, Red Oak is at least as 'stiff' (MOE rating) as BB ply, so the cab's Fs should be well above its passband. Factor in this small a driver plus limited Xmax can't generate enough acoustic pressure in a BVR to excite it enough to matter has me wondering what's causing high enough amplitude, 'low' frequencies to vibrate a 'massive' glass of wine.
FWIW, I stand on end a square edged enough coin and as long as it doesn't dance around or topple at the highest typical average SPL of a pipe organ symphony, the cab's sufficiently non-resonant.
GM
- Status
- Not open for further replies.
- Home
- More Vendors...
- Feastrex
- Exciting new line of fullrange drivers from Feastrex