Is fullrange (horn) the right for me?

I am looking in to building new floor speakers, currently I have three way conventional bass reflex with bi-amping and active crossover.

They will be used for both TV/movie and music (no disco or metal, mostly jazz and folk). No subwoofer will be used.

How would fullrange 8" satisfy this? Seas FA22RCZ in a vented (sealable) enclosure, (in Finnish) Audiokit Aw-F22 rakennussarja - Hifitalo ?

Or the same driver in a horn enclosure, Mauhorn IV – D a r k L a n t e r n ? How do they sound, are they very directional and difficult to place in an apartment?

I have access to a full fledged carpentry workshop but no competence in designing enclosures.
 
How would fullrange 8" satisfy this? Seas FA22RCZ in a vented (sealable) enclosure, (in Finnish) Audiokit Aw-F22 rakennussarja - Hifitalo ?

To be honest, this is entirely subjective. You mention folk / jazz, and an apartment, which are usually situations where wideband drivers do well (and the Seas is a decent example of an 8in whizzer-cone unit). There is little technical data on the box & its tuning from a very quick look, but it suits regular vented box loads well enough.

Or the same driver in a horn enclosure, Mauhorn IV – D a r k L a n t e r n ?

The Mauhorn IV was not designed for the Seas driver, so I would not anticipate it being a drop-in replacement for the 1990s era Lowther units.

How do they sound,

Subjective; we all of us differ biologically, value different things and frequently mean different things with a given phrase, especially those that have no precise technical definition. Since I don't have the skill to describe sound in a way that everybody else will agree with, I won't attempt it.

are they very directional and difficult to place in an apartment?

Reasonably so to the former, for the latter, it rather depends how you define 'difficult to place'; this will also to a point depend on the enclosure & how large it is! Usually though, if you're able to adjust the toe-angle, you shouldn't find it too difficult.
 
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As far as I know, the Mauhorn XII was not designed for the Seas unit either. It was designed for Lowther units available at that time.

For what it's worth, 1/2 space & sample room load with the Mauhorn IV and the Seas unit.
 

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Greets!

I assume apt. construction in Finland is more robust than in my locale, i.e. more concrete/massive Vs wood framing/flex, so FWIW/IME a traditional prosound frequency response works well in mine: nominally flat from 80-300 Hz, rolling off at 24 dB/octave [4th order] to a 40 Hz tuning if vented and best corner loaded if sealed.

Done a few in concrete n' steel high rise apt. using much larger speakers with 20-35 Hz tunings, which wound up needing isolation pads, so if using a BLH, recommend one that rolls off below 60-80 Hz, especially if corner loaded.

My SWAG is the FH3 [BVR] alignment modded as required to whichever driver you choose would be the 'hot ticket' 😉.

GM
 
Tqwt with Lii audio crystal 10, better bass than an 8" and from my experience better all round. Now that I use a Bakoon 11r they are the most astonishing driver I ever heard. Music I thought I knew well has very different tones to instruments and very immediate.
 
The BK20is another not so great antique design.

The SEAS FA22 is a nice driver, one of 2 8” i like (i tend toward smaller drivers). Mine went into a sealed box (recycled KEF Calinda), a bit bigger would be a bit better.



I see no point in putting this driver in anything but a sealed box, but if you want one with a hole in it, Scott did a BR and a Festival (ML-Voigt).

Miscellaneous designs -Mark Audio, Fostex, TB, Dayton, Seas etc.

If you wanted a horn you would have to start from scratch and it, i expect, would be HUGE.

dave
 
A passive radiator is a BR vent substitute for a proper vent when you have a small box tuned low and the vent becomes too large.

It complicates things by adding an addiitonal suspension resonances. If i get into a place where one would be mandated i move on, rethinking the driver or the box. I do not like them.

dave
 
OK but how do you see this design would stand up against a multi-way BR, e.g.

Seas CX871, Seas CX871 Coaxial 3-Way Speaker Kit by Peter Noerbaek - Pair
or a smaller design with two Seas Excel 6.5"?
Will these fullrange drivers in an MLTL sound as good as or better than 3-4 times as expensive multi-way design?
My listening room is around 5*5 meters.

I have full-range desktop speakers ( 3D printable speakers ) and like them very much.
 
It seems the FA22 is best suited for sealed or vented enclosures. Wonder how it would work with a passive radiator?

Could work quite well actually. While Dave's concerns are a good reason to avoid them for most wide BW/'FR' apps, the Seas has a low enough Fs, high enough Qt to allow a low enough tuning below Fs [~0.707x] for them to decay enough to make the driver 'feel' a ~ sealed alignment above the mid-bass where our hearing acuity starts getting better.

It will need dual opposed 8" PRs that can be tuned to ~20 Hz, so do any exist?

GM