Terry Cain's BIB -why does it work and does anyone have those Fostex Craft Handbooks?

More reading and my questions are answered. It looks like I will be choosing the Alpair 10p as the ideal driver. It can go pretty low and models a decent sized cabinet. They are also relatively inexpensive for their build quality. I think that the qts at 0.33 is a bit low so I will boost it a bit in the Bib calc and go with that Vb. Then I will plug in its TS values into the Website that GM provided to calculate series resistance to add to their input. I will be running a gainclone, which has no or very small output impedance of it's own, so I don't think I need to adjust for that, right? I will probably build/stuff the boxes similarly to how Jim Shearer built his earlier in the thread. Thanks for everyones help on this.
 
Hmm, as many times as I've posted the following in one form or other, apparently never in this thread........

In designing/building high efficiency [HE] and/or acoustically too large cabs, it's a good plan to dial it in in-room with a [cheap] 25 ohm pot, then replace it with a high quality fixed power resistor or at least a tapped one.

This also serves to preload the amp against operating in its non linear region where not a lot of power is required at the app's average SPL [most consumer 'FR' driver, compression horn systems].

GM
 
Indeed the 10P & 10.3 work very well in a range of enclosures much more domestic friendly than a BIB. I'm currently running a trio of them in front row of 7.1 system; Scott Lindgren's Pensils for L&R mains, and one of Dave's "MarKen" family for compact centre channel - where surround system bass management easily deals with what would otherwise be a compromise of the bottom octave that usually accompanies reduced enclosure volumes.

While I have no idea as to the actual damping factor of the amp stage of my Onkyo receiver, it's probably much higher than any of the tube amps I've ever owned, but even when used in direct stereo bypass with no sub channel running I don't find the Pensils lacking in the bottom. Of course there's a lot of factors in that particular calculus, and YMMV.
 
Indeed the 10P & 10.3 work very well in a range of enclosures much more domestic friendly than a BIB.

My wife surprised me by preferring a full height BIB to more standard size floorstanding or stand-mounted loudspeakers. The big BIB is visually cleaner and continuous. It felt cool, manly and excessive to build BIBs, but when my wife said this I knew she was right. There, it's a girly speaker.
 
Good evening, I read all the pages but my English is very basic and often one word can change the meaning of everything. Recapitulating: bib is calculated with the excel sheet, with only three values, FR, VAS, QTR. Bib is a project made to place the speakers in the corners and must end near the ceiling, mine is 3.20 meters so it is not optimal, I think probably better with an inverted BIB. Give me confirmation of this data?
Merry Christmas
 
Hi Scot don’t know much about the BIB, BUT the FE166en works great in my FHXL’s as it did with the Abby’s I built years ago but lost in my house fire(2011) . Anyway if I had a larger room i’d probably build the BIB’s . The FE166 seems a better compromise to the other drivers recommended for the FHXL , IMHO......right or wrong........
 
.....or just adding some series resistance, so recommend using a cheap 25 ohm pot for fine tuning any box alignment in-room, then replacing it with an appropriate gauge speaker wire and/or a grid of small, low tolerance resistors to get ~exactly the same value.

GM
 
.....or just adding some series resistance, so recommend using a cheap 25 ohm pot for fine tuning any box alignment in-room, then replacing it with an appropriate gauge speaker wire and/or a grid of small, low tolerance resistors to get ~exactly the same value.

GM

Absolutely! I use my FE166E BIBs with an 8 ohm series resistor when driving them with my push-pull EL84 amp, and without the resistor when I listen to my '45 SET. It totally changes the character of the bass reproduction.