PVC TL enclosure calculations

Status
Not open for further replies.
You’ll likely need at least 4” pip. ,aybe 5 or 6 to het sufficient cross-section — but that is just an educated guess.

dave

FWIW, a quick Hornresp TL sim based on an IB's > 10x Vas yields a +/- 3 dB [normally good enough in room for all but the 'golden eared'] down to ~62 Hz/Fs impedance tuning [Fp] with a modest amount of evenly distributed polyfil stuffing.

3" - 7" i.d. pipes sim acoustically too close in the bass to matter, though the largest does have a bit less mid band 'ripple', but by stuffing to 'taste', my SWAG is that the 5" based a ~10x Vas should allow sufficient tuning adjustment without risking 'choking' the driver from too high a stuffing density.

Regardless of pipe diameter: 54.33"/138 cm i.d. long, driver offset = 18.9"/48 cm i.d. spaced up off the floor a little puts the driver at the popular ~38" seated ear height.

GM
 

Attachments

I just ran calcs based upon the alignment tables excel sheet and cam up with the following:

Re 6.8
Fs 82
Qts 0.63
Sd 30.2
Bl 3.5
SL/SO 1

Area of open/closed end 17.04"
Actual length 39.58

Any thoughts on the delta between this and GMs Hornresp calculated length?
 
Note that HR only calculated what I inputted, same as any other box design program; my design is based on T/S specs where a max flat alignment is when Fb = Fs, Vb = Vas, Qts' = ~0.403 from this basic formula: Vb = 20*Vas*Qts'^3.3

Qts' = Qts + any added series resistance [Rs]: HiFi Loudspeaker Design

From this we see that when Qts' is < ~0.403: Fb > Fs, Vb < Vas and vice versa when > ~0.403 [Fb < Fs, ​Vb > Vas], so with the PC83's ~0.63 + wiring losses, Fp < Fs, ​Vb > Vas and what my alignment is based on whereas MJK ignores this and tunes to actual Fs [the pioneer's choice], so his is shorter, 'fatter' and has a bit less net bulk with the trade-off that with the same percentage [optimum] driver offset requires more work to get it up to ear height.

Consequently, mine has a lower Q ['slower'] roll off below its mass corner [2*Fs/Qts' = ~246 Hz] that usually blends better overall in room than his max flat/4th order slope, requiring more stuffing to match it [assuming you wanted to], so in this case it seems more about which one you prefer to build for whatever reason since any performance differences is stuffing density dependent.

Then again, some folks would prefer the shorter, 'fatter' pipe's potentially > 'thump' in the mid-bass as shown in HR's 'raw' comparison depending on what type, how much and where in the pipe, stuffing is put.

GM
 

Attachments

  • Dayton PC83-8 TL GM damped.PNG
    Dayton PC83-8 TL GM damped.PNG
    63.2 KB · Views: 250
  • Dayton PC83-8 TL MJK damped.PNG
    Dayton PC83-8 TL MJK damped.PNG
    52.6 KB · Views: 250
  • Dayton PC83-8 TL GM Vs MJK.PNG
    Dayton PC83-8 TL GM Vs MJK.PNG
    70.4 KB · Views: 235
  • DaytonPC83-TLMJK.txt
    DaytonPC83-TLMJK.txt
    1 KB · Views: 68
Status
Not open for further replies.