Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-03 8:44 pm #1 2014-04-03 8:44 pm #1 I discovered Jean Michel Le Cleac'h just recently, so I missed him by a few months. What a great loss for us all. My father had done something similar contemporaneously, and I'm going to try to post some of his papers in case anyone's interested. Chris Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-03 9:08 pm #2 2014-04-03 9:08 pm #2 Here's a 400 Hz horn with comparison to (flat wavefront approximation) exponential: Chris Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-03 9:15 pm #3 2014-04-03 9:15 pm #3 This is the way it was done before spreadsheets. Yikes! Chris Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-04 1:25 am #4 2014-04-04 1:25 am #4 Many years later, Jack revisited the problem, and here shows a way (in Derive - this is early days of spread sheets) to make the calculations directly, without step-wise approximation. Chris Kolbrek Member Joined 2007 kolbrek.hornspeakersystems.info/ 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 Very interesting. Thanks for sharing. -Bjørn Status Not open for further replies. Share: Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn Reddit Pinterest Tumblr WhatsApp Email Link
I discovered Jean Michel Le Cleac'h just recently, so I missed him by a few months. What a great loss for us all. My father had done something similar contemporaneously, and I'm going to try to post some of his papers in case anyone's interested. Chris
Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-03 9:08 pm #2 2014-04-03 9:08 pm #2 Here's a 400 Hz horn with comparison to (flat wavefront approximation) exponential: Chris Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-03 9:15 pm #3 2014-04-03 9:15 pm #3 This is the way it was done before spreadsheets. Yikes! Chris Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-04 1:25 am #4 2014-04-04 1:25 am #4 Many years later, Jack revisited the problem, and here shows a way (in Derive - this is early days of spread sheets) to make the calculations directly, without step-wise approximation. Chris Kolbrek Member Joined 2007 kolbrek.hornspeakersystems.info/ 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 Very interesting. Thanks for sharing. -Bjørn Status Not open for further replies. Share: Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn Reddit Pinterest Tumblr WhatsApp Email Link
Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-03 9:15 pm #3 2014-04-03 9:15 pm #3 This is the way it was done before spreadsheets. Yikes! Chris Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-04 1:25 am #4 2014-04-04 1:25 am #4 Many years later, Jack revisited the problem, and here shows a way (in Derive - this is early days of spread sheets) to make the calculations directly, without step-wise approximation. Chris Kolbrek Member Joined 2007 kolbrek.hornspeakersystems.info/ 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 Very interesting. Thanks for sharing. -Bjørn Status Not open for further replies. Share: Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn Reddit Pinterest Tumblr WhatsApp Email Link
Chris Hornbeck Member Joined 2011 2014-04-04 1:25 am #4 2014-04-04 1:25 am #4 Many years later, Jack revisited the problem, and here shows a way (in Derive - this is early days of spread sheets) to make the calculations directly, without step-wise approximation. Chris Kolbrek Member Joined 2007 kolbrek.hornspeakersystems.info/ 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 Very interesting. Thanks for sharing. -Bjørn Status Not open for further replies.
Many years later, Jack revisited the problem, and here shows a way (in Derive - this is early days of spread sheets) to make the calculations directly, without step-wise approximation. Chris
Kolbrek Member Joined 2007 kolbrek.hornspeakersystems.info/ 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 2014-06-24 10:44 am #5 Very interesting. Thanks for sharing. -Bjørn