Thanks it does help a lot.It looks to me like the original crossover had three parts in it, a resistor, a capacitor and a coil. I could be wrong, but It seems the guy bought three parts of identical values to the original crossover and just wired them exactly the same. If it were me I would have just swapped the parts directly on the existing circuit board one at a time and the job would be done. No rewiring required. Pull the resistor, put the new one in its place. Same for the coil and cap. I don't actually believe there will be any audible or measurable difference from these boutique parts if they are of the same value as the originals as the original parts were of high quality. Of course it's fun to do a project anyway. Hope that helps.
Cheers
TD
Identify the resonant wall.
Brace it at it's center either to the opposing wall or to two oposing corners of the enclosure. To connect the brace to the resonant wall, instead of glue, use a generous layer of butyl caulk. The points of connection depend on the source of the vibration. It can be the the speaker magnet moving the baffle or it can be the box inflating and deflating.
Similar method was described in KEF LS50 whitepaper to stop the front baffle from vibrating. They pressed the magnet to the rear with damping rubber. The results surpassed bitumen layer on the walls, suggested above.
It's more effective if the panel is already braced with stiff connection. But in that case, you need two damping braces, one for each section.
Brace it at it's center either to the opposing wall or to two oposing corners of the enclosure. To connect the brace to the resonant wall, instead of glue, use a generous layer of butyl caulk. The points of connection depend on the source of the vibration. It can be the the speaker magnet moving the baffle or it can be the box inflating and deflating.
Similar method was described in KEF LS50 whitepaper to stop the front baffle from vibrating. They pressed the magnet to the rear with damping rubber. The results surpassed bitumen layer on the walls, suggested above.
It's more effective if the panel is already braced with stiff connection. But in that case, you need two damping braces, one for each section.
Last edited:
if you are convinced its a cabinet resonance, wrap another layer of material around it (but not the front baffle)
even 1/4" MDF bonded with a thick layer of compliant glue should stiffen and dampen the walls.
even 1/4" MDF bonded with a thick layer of compliant glue should stiffen and dampen the walls.
It looks to me like the original crossover had three parts in it, a resistor, a capacitor and a coil. I could be wrong, but It seems the guy bought three parts of identical values to the original crossover and just wired them exactly the same. If it were me I would have just swapped the parts directly on the existing circuit board one at a time and the job would be done. No rewiring required. Pull the resistor, put the new one in its place. Same for the coil and cap. I don't actually believe there will be any audible or measurable difference from these boutique parts if they are of the same value as the originals as the original parts were of high quality. Of course it's fun to do a project anyway. Hope that helps.
The parts were hot glued onto the circuit board, they weren't going anywhere.