vivek.saikia
Active Member
A pic of the enclosure: unfinished but good for some early listening tests.
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Is it laminated MDF board?
A pic of the enclosure: unfinished but good for some early listening tests.
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Thanks Kapvin, I have replied your PM.
This sub is designed with Martin's MLTL worksheet, so in theory it is a mass loaded transmission line. But due to the relatively small size, the effect of quarter wave loading will be minimal and I think it will behave more like a ported enclosure.
I collected the enclosure from the carpenter this morning, will post a pic soon.
Is it laminated MDF board?
fast work! hope to hear it when I am in bangalore around diwali
Hi Anthony,
Hats off to your motivation! I have a Behringer DCX2496 which is a digital active xover along with a whole bunch of cables. I had bought it a while ago during my Lowthers in OB days, let me know if you would like to borrow it for simulating whatever cross-over points you are considering.
@Sonicbliss: From what I have noticed a shallow slope for the sub was good in integrating with the mains, it was not the case with the MTM as a steeper xover slope seemed better. There was some issues with room gain which disappeared when I placed the sub at 90 degree with the MTM. There is more to be tested but the lower xover slope seems to be working fine for the sub even with the ported MTMs.
Good to know that even with ported MTMs an asymmetric slope gives better integration of the MTM-sub-room system.
For the Earl setup, the mains NEED to be run as sealed (and crossoverless) to get a shallow acoustic slope.
Ported MTM has extension but the slope is steep, probably thats why they didnt blend with a shallow slope on them.
Can you explain the rationale behind this suggestion. Why should I eq the sub and how will it help in better integration with my MTM's?You will then need to Eq the sub...
Now, Earl actually recommends 3 subs so you may not be able to get the same success with a single sub, but his method will work better than any other approach is what I am assuming.
It is worth experimenting IMHO. You never know, the MTM-sub marriage may achieve higher sonic bliss in the room with his method.
Antony
I'm a firm believer in the value of a powered sub with monitors, I've been using subs for the past decade, and if anyone tells me that to listen to 2 channel audio a sub is not needed, my answer is simple-I prefer it that way, period!
Having a good sub definitely enhances the listening experience IMHO.
Hooked up the sub for some early listening tests. My netbook + Creative x-fi USB sound card combo used as source with Foobar & foo_dsp_xover for crossing the sub and the MTMs. Integrating the sub was harder than I thought, had to try with many combinations of filter order, crossover frequency and sub positioning to finally get things sound right. At this stage the sub was crossed at 40Hz 2nd order(low pass) and MTMs at 50Hz 4th order(high pass).
IMO the sub improved the listening experience of songs with good bass tracks: rock and especially heavy metal tracks reveled more "body" with the bass guitar and drums. Bass Drums started to sound more tight and well defined with better attack. There was notable difference in listening experience with Iron Maiden, Ozzy and some old recordings like Hendrix. Pinkfloyd revealed a bit of low frequency content, tracks like Sorrow had plenty of creamy low bass, the low bass sort of passes through the body and gives a "being there feeling" to the track. Also, if the room gain is not handled sufficiently, bass will get muddied easily.
@Sonicbliss: From what I have noticed a shallow slope for the sub was good in integrating with the mains, it was not the case with the MTM as a steeper xover slope seemed better. There was some issues with room gain which disappeared when I placed the sub at 90 degree with the MTM. There is more to be tested but the lower xover slope seems to be working fine for the sub even with the ported MTMs.
Pics..
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Antony,
Great and fast work. Very good looking sub. Did you do vinly laminate on MDF for the grain? My suggestion is to go for a ready made high efficiency plate amp for the sub, instead of building. My view is that you cannot add substantial quality to a sub amp by going the DIY route.
Cheers.
Antony,
Did you do vinly laminate on MDF for the grain?
Cheers.