Tune audio Epitome

Ok, what about something like this
Subwoofer tower having two 10inch woofer horn loaded to step up efficiency, controlled dsp hypex fa501.
Midhorn bms 4590 + tweeter
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Congratulations on an excellent project 👏, where should I start tackle such a feet? If you have some reading sources that might help, I would highly appreciate it
Follow what others have done. Read the Unity horn patent. Do lots of experiments changing one variable at a time, port lenght/shape/location, volume under cone, distance from hf source, etc. You will quickly learn how these things work. Learn VituixCad and ath4.

This is what I did. It's not hard, you just need to go through all the steps and realise you will be making a lot of prototypes.
 
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Reactions: noamgeller
Follow what others have done.
Thank you for the advice, truly appreciate it.
I am very new to horns and as for now it seems like a mountain (a scary one) of knowledge I'll have to tackle...
What brought me actually to horns were the last Western Electric presentation of piano play I heard in this year munich... a 97 year old loudspeakers play faster then any modern speaker I heard at the show. Maybe the Silbatone equipment helped a bit as well
But since then I'm hooked!
 
please do not mount drivers horizontally ... gravity will ruin the suspension over time

keep acoustic centers close together

account for minimum delay between drivers to get good summation at maximum bandwidth

SPL MAX at distance X should meet your requirements depending on input power , lower cut-of frequency vs driver area/Xmax ...
 
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Horn loaded, am I wrong?
Maybe into the midrange you can consider what you drew as horn loading or a waveguide.

Size required for a classic horn design that goes into the low bass region:
https://www.passdiy.com/gallery/speakers/the-kleinhorn-part-1

Also consider things like the Klipschorn that used the room walls to extend the bass horn to reasonable frequencies. Bass horns get big fast.

There are more modern ways to shrink them some with limited degradation, but even those are much larger than what you were thinking.
 
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