I haven't done it, but I've seen the results of Danny Richie's kit where the tweeter is routered a bit to nestle against the woofer. Seemed to work perfectly. I asked him how he did it when we were talking about his kit with the ribbon tweeter. He said that he screws the faceplate down (with tweeter itself removed) and routs it when he cuts the woofer hole. I'm not sure how you'd do it on a dome tweeter that sticks out past the faceplate and isn't removable from said faceplate. I guess, I'd screw down a piece of masonite with a cutout for the dome and router through the masonite a well so the router shoe doesn't modify the tweeter dome. Also the dome would be covered with a cloth taped into place.
Sheldon
Sheldon
Member
Joined 2003
So how come this isn't done more often? By having the speakers closer together it will help in using a lower crossover point. In a MTM like a d'appolito it seems to make the most sense.
It would make it harder to reuse in another project though. There must be some reason I'm not seeing that makes it prohibitive to do.
Dayton silk dome
Home Theatre speaker I am looking at doing
It would make it harder to reuse in another project though. There must be some reason I'm not seeing that makes it prohibitive to do.
Dayton silk dome
Home Theatre speaker I am looking at doing
It's fairly easy when using tools you're comfortable with. I reshaped the bottom of a pair, to conform with 5.25" pincushion midwoofers. I marked the shape from the woofers, and removed the material with a Black & Decker "Wizzard"; using a very small sanding drum. Finished the smoothing/edge rounding by hand with finishing paper. Turned out great... and was much easier than I had "feared"!
TTYL
TTYL
There must be some reason I'm not seeing that makes it prohibitive to do
On my Jamo 7.6's the tweeter is routered at the top and bottom in that MTM config. Removing the mid drivers you can see it was done by a router, it wasn't done when the tweet was made. If this is practiced successfully on a commercial basis, I think you should be ok...
I've done it as follows:
1) Route out tweeter recess and hole.
2) Remove tweeter face plate and install in baffle.
3) Route woofer recess. Done.
I think it's important to consider how much "meat" you are chowing off. There are limits to how well this method works (which limits I'm glad I did not discover).
1) Route out tweeter recess and hole.
2) Remove tweeter face plate and install in baffle.
3) Route woofer recess. Done.
I think it's important to consider how much "meat" you are chowing off. There are limits to how well this method works (which limits I'm glad I did not discover).
- Status
- This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
- Home
- Loudspeakers
- Multi-Way
- routering faceplates