Little Big Horn

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The peak shows up in the same place with the bugelhorns also. I think the position is a function of horn length and since they are about the same length it shows up in the same place. Both horns are about 1.6m which is about 1/2 wavelength at 100hz. I think it may be caused by the difference between theoretical and actual coupling to the room at the mouth. Maybe a mismatch is causing a reflection which shows up as the peak at 100hz.

It will be interesting to compare with chuyler1's frugelhorn when we get together.
 
Did you try putting some loose fibre stuffing in the horn to see if it will damp that peak? Worked for my Sachikos...takes a bit of effort to get the amount right and I was limited about where I could put it as I couldn't get past the first or last fold from either the mouth or from behind the driver.

-- Andrew
 
Also try taking some measurements in a different room, or perhaps outside. You want to rule out any room-related issues regarding your box design. It won't help you in the end, but it will help us make a decision as to whether we should try the project in our own rooms 🙂
 
Well, AndrewL it worked! I had some nylon fiber stuffing around and tried one small handful and noticed a small difference then tried two small handfuls in different point on the expansion and it made a huge difference (see attached plot). It cut the 100hz peak down 7-8db and also reduced the rest of the ripple also. On the downside, it also cut down the level at 40hz a few db also. It seems like a good trade.

Thanks!

Denis
 

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Great, glad it worked out. Don't thank me, however, thank Martin King, and Scottmoose, Dave D and others.

From what I have learnt, you have, in simple terms (that goes for most physically acceptable horns, i.e. ones we can live with size wise) created a combination of a horn and a transmisson line, this seems inevitable when we try and create something that is compact but still a horn, its fizzics as an old school chum would say.

The fibre damps the TL action, I think, I'm still learning, of course you loose a bit of sensitivity but the gains seem to be worth it as it reduces ripple and gets rid of the low bass peaks.

-- Andrew
 
I'm not sure the absolute levels of the two runs are directly comparable. Small changes in the position of the mike from run to run can easily make a db or two difference. Here is the same plot with the "stuffed line" shifted up two db to better match up. You can better tell exactly what was chopped off.
 

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I can't say for the Frugelhorn but I can tell you it did the same for my Bugelhorn. It leaves one peak alone but largely smooths out everything else. I can takes the same measurements for your Frugel when we get together if you want.
 

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Based on some comments in the eNABL thread it appears that the output impedance of my measuring setup was giving anomalous results. I've since added a T-Amp to driver the speaker. It appears it was this problem that caused the 100hz peak I mentioned in previous posts.

Here is the mouth data with and without stuffing. You can see that, even without stuffing, the 100 hz peak is gone. The stuffing reduces the rest of the ripple as well as reducing overall mouth levels by 2-3 db.
 

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