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could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
- subpirate
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14 years 5 days ago #10757
by subpirate
could use some help with enclosure choice for small room was created by subpirate
ok so i have a small bar that holds about 150 people packed like sardines i need some sugguestions on enclosure types for the bass bins i want to keep the spl up on the dancefloor ..the current system is a pair of EV loaded dual 15 mains and 2 older peavy front loaded reflex cabs with selinium 800w drivers..
the subs fart out and really just sound like ass ...bad cab/driver combo so im planning on replacing the cabs
my real question is this.. what cab design will give me a solid punch for doing rockbands and also enough sub bass to please a heavy dubstep/bass music crowd ..i want to rattle peoples guts with bass
right now i am relying on the top boxes way to much for the bottom end
i really like the simplicity of the cubo design..i also thought about losing the 18's and building dual 15 cabs..
the subs fart out and really just sound like ass ...bad cab/driver combo so im planning on replacing the cabs
my real question is this.. what cab design will give me a solid punch for doing rockbands and also enough sub bass to please a heavy dubstep/bass music crowd ..i want to rattle peoples guts with bass
right now i am relying on the top boxes way to much for the bottom end
i really like the simplicity of the cubo design..i also thought about losing the 18's and building dual 15 cabs..
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- Tony Wilkes
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14 years 5 days ago #10758
by Tony Wilkes
Replied by Tony Wilkes on topic could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
Martinsson 15" tapped horns, nice and compact and suitably subby. Use the best driver you can afford it will pay dividends.
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- MAutopsy
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14 years 5 days ago #10762
by MAutopsy
Replied by MAutopsy on topic could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
four mth30's would be perfect smiley20
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- jsk
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14 years 5 days ago #10763
by jsk
Replied by jsk on topic could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
+1 on the Martinsson THAM15. Great compact solution, Will run 35 - 200hz and very musical
too.
too.
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- GekoMusic94
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14 years 5 days ago #10764
by GekoMusic94
Replied by GekoMusic94 on topic could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
+1. The MTH-30 are great!MAutopsy wrote: four mth30's would be perfect smiley20
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- Tony Wilkes
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14 years 4 days ago #10765
by Tony Wilkes
Replied by Tony Wilkes on topic could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
He did say he needed sub and <40 hz is usually considered sub. AFAIK the MTH-30 will not give any significant output down there.
Tony
Tony
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- chaudio
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14 years 3 days ago #10781
by chaudio
Replied by chaudio on topic could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
Call me a boring git but I'd probably just put 4 decent 18" reflex subs in there.
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- Tony Wilkes
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14 years 3 days ago #10783
by Tony Wilkes
Replied by Tony Wilkes on topic could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
Chris, before I built the Martinsson tapped horns that would have been my first response.
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- chaudio
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14 years 3 days ago #10784
by chaudio
Replied by chaudio on topic could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
I must admit to have not ventured into tapped horn territory yet. I'm not sure calling them a horn is entirely accurate as the expansion isn't huge. In some ways they're more just resonant pipes like TQWP's or Transmission Lines. However, the simulations and experimental reports seem to suggest they're effective so I'm definitely curious. Shame I already have so much on the to-do list!
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14 years 2 days ago #10786
by jsg
Ars est celare artem
Replied by jsg on topic could use some help with enclosure choice for small room
The Martinsson design at
www.martinsson.cc/blog/index.php
... 923-101228
will act like a series tuned 6-th order bandpass.
The "front chamber" is the baffles surrounding the driver, a duct of say 20 inches effective depth that will resonate (quarter-wave) at 170Hz. The "rear chamber" is a duct of about 80 inches that resonates at about 42Hz and feeds into the front chamber, as seen with series tuned (type bandpasses.
Series tuning helps to increase bandwith at both ends at the cost of less sensitivity at the top end. A response from 35 to 200Hz is entirely possible. Doing it with ducts mostly means that higher resonant modes will get excited in the rear duct, which will have a predictable but difficult-to-manage effect on the response (3rd@127Hz, 5th@212Hz). This effect is likely to make it non-flat, but might still make the sound more enjoyable, especialy to those of us who are accustomed to the boom boxes made by Turbosound et al.
The "front chamber" is the baffles surrounding the driver, a duct of say 20 inches effective depth that will resonate (quarter-wave) at 170Hz. The "rear chamber" is a duct of about 80 inches that resonates at about 42Hz and feeds into the front chamber, as seen with series tuned (type bandpasses.
Series tuning helps to increase bandwith at both ends at the cost of less sensitivity at the top end. A response from 35 to 200Hz is entirely possible. Doing it with ducts mostly means that higher resonant modes will get excited in the rear duct, which will have a predictable but difficult-to-manage effect on the response (3rd@127Hz, 5th@212Hz). This effect is likely to make it non-flat, but might still make the sound more enjoyable, especialy to those of us who are accustomed to the boom boxes made by Turbosound et al.
Ars est celare artem
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