Agreed. I flipped my T-TQWT 180* for more midbass response.I've found out the hard way that just shoving a subwoofer in a corner is not the best idea and the intended placement has a lot of influence on which design will work best.
2012
August 2022 before we moved.
Tapped = driver mounted inside the inside the enclosure
That is too restrictive a definition, Tapped means "part of the way”. A horn with the driver mounted part way along the horn, a swe see in an ML-Voigt or a Frugel-Horn for instance.
dave
No it doesn't or there would not be multiple "tap" options in HR for a TH.
The "tap" can happen anywhere along the horn's path as long as it is feasible. See Keystone, Paraflex, etc.
The "tap" can happen anywhere along the horn's path as long as it is feasible. See Keystone, Paraflex, etc.
Some Frugel Horns are basically a Transmission Line enclosure due to the non continuous positive flare.
Rear Loaded Horns are basically BR's with a positive flare port/vent. See Scoops.
Traditional Horns are FLH (BP4's with a positive flare port/vent), BP6S (TH, Keystone, Paraflex), or BP6P (vented FLH or Compound Horn).
Rear Loaded Horns are basically BR's with a positive flare port/vent. See Scoops.
Traditional Horns are FLH (BP4's with a positive flare port/vent), BP6S (TH, Keystone, Paraflex), or BP6P (vented FLH or Compound Horn).
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Some Frugel Horns are basically a Transmission Line enclosure due to the non continuous positive flare.
All Frugel-Horns are tapped horns with a choke (ala Klipscsh).
All horns are in a sense transmisison lines (in the widest use of the term).
dave
Forget that one, it is a traditional Air Cavity horn, and gewts smoked by teh Frugel-Horn Mk3 et al.
dave
dave
This version is STILL not a tapped horn.
It's basically a transmission line.
Traditional RLH's have continuous positive flares.
TAPPED horns have the driver buried inside the enclosure.
It's basically a transmission line.
Traditional RLH's have continuous positive flares.
TAPPED horns have the driver buried inside the enclosure.
This version is STILL not a tapped horn.
It is. The driver enters the horn partway along its length.
@Scottmoose?
dave
THESE are RLHs!
Those are Air Cavity horns. They are not the only horns.
A tapped horn is less of a horn than the Frugel-Horns if you want to be picky. They are double tapped quarter-wave lines with a very limited bandwidth.
dave
THIS particular enclosure COULD be modeled as a RLH or a TH, due to the driver being in the horn's path.
It's basically a TH with a compression chamber.
At the frequencies involved the angled baffle is only a clever trick to make a more compact horn. And a clever way of creting the Air Cavity.
dave
Those are Air Cavity horns. They are not the only horns.
A tapped horn is less of a horn than the Frugel-Horns if you want to be picky. They are double tapped quarter-wave lines with a very limited bandwidth.
dave
I already stated multiple type of horns in previous posts.
The driver on a standard BR can be positioned ANYWHERE on the 6 sides of the enclosure, does that make it a "tapped" enclosure?
A transmission line is nothing more than a BR enclosure with a positive OR negative flare port/vent.
With a TRUE tapped horn, the tapped point is critical on getting the front and rear waves of the driver to work together.
That situation is NOT the same with BR and TL enclosures.
As matter of fact there is a TL thread in this subwoofer section where I asked the designer to remove some of the "line" and the enclosure performed better as a standard BR enclosure. Let me find the thread.
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