Here's some more changes and ideas to make the Ohm's really, really amazing...
One thing I've been realizing is that the higher I cross over the main speakers the better they sound, my theory is that the Walsh driver
likes to be un-loaded a bit as bass could possibly swamp the midrange and some tweeting signals.
I will continue to look in to that aspect of the sound. It could also be the reason the smaller speakers sound as good in the upper range.
In the next few days I will try an open cell foam plugg in the vent port to see if it changes the quality of the bass. This is of course a guessing exercise and who knows I might hate it.
I have also wondered why there's no tweeting in the back, so I'm planing to take the original tweeters, build a simple crossover loaded directly from the speaker wire posts, that way I don't have to hack the original crossover. If this works and I don't see why not, as I had some Von Sweikerts VR4's which used a back firing tweeter to great effect, and I did love those speakers a lot. To control the tweeter I will use a volume control in the circuit....
Back to the tweeter platform build on the 4/5k's....
After considering the options to dampen the (circular) plywood
part I decided to use 1/16" thick (3" wide) basswood in three layers with dampening material on the first layer and semi rigid glue between the slats to dampen any further vibrations. All this was glued to the edge of the platform and clamped.
So when you look at the platform it now looks like a birthday cake
made from plywood covering all the dampening material. After the edge was cleaned up I covered the whole thing with dark grey felt,
contact cement made the whole affair super easy and very clean looking :) Sudenly no vibrations just a thud when I tap it.
The original set up had a pice of white cardboard glued (hot melt)
to the tweeter, in the shape and size of half the platform, the bottom front edged hot glued in on the bottom and then folded backwards in a soft arc to a standoff in the middle of the crossover. As I changed the tweeter I wanted to cancel as much of a possible back wave so the the felt got folded in towards the back, semi mimicking
the original folded cardboard. Any protruding edge got a open cell
foam edge to cancel unwanted reflections...
The speaker cover is the old style so called black fabric, but to me it looks like faded black anodized aluminum, kind of a purplish color that needs to go, so I found some black, real black stuff that should go a long way to modernize the look.
That will do it for now, and I look forward to share the rest of the project very soon...🇸🇪
One thing I've been realizing is that the higher I cross over the main speakers the better they sound, my theory is that the Walsh driver
likes to be un-loaded a bit as bass could possibly swamp the midrange and some tweeting signals.
I will continue to look in to that aspect of the sound. It could also be the reason the smaller speakers sound as good in the upper range.
In the next few days I will try an open cell foam plugg in the vent port to see if it changes the quality of the bass. This is of course a guessing exercise and who knows I might hate it.
I have also wondered why there's no tweeting in the back, so I'm planing to take the original tweeters, build a simple crossover loaded directly from the speaker wire posts, that way I don't have to hack the original crossover. If this works and I don't see why not, as I had some Von Sweikerts VR4's which used a back firing tweeter to great effect, and I did love those speakers a lot. To control the tweeter I will use a volume control in the circuit....
Back to the tweeter platform build on the 4/5k's....
After considering the options to dampen the (circular) plywood
part I decided to use 1/16" thick (3" wide) basswood in three layers with dampening material on the first layer and semi rigid glue between the slats to dampen any further vibrations. All this was glued to the edge of the platform and clamped.
So when you look at the platform it now looks like a birthday cake
made from plywood covering all the dampening material. After the edge was cleaned up I covered the whole thing with dark grey felt,
contact cement made the whole affair super easy and very clean looking :) Sudenly no vibrations just a thud when I tap it.
The original set up had a pice of white cardboard glued (hot melt)
to the tweeter, in the shape and size of half the platform, the bottom front edged hot glued in on the bottom and then folded backwards in a soft arc to a standoff in the middle of the crossover. As I changed the tweeter I wanted to cancel as much of a possible back wave so the the felt got folded in towards the back, semi mimicking
the original folded cardboard. Any protruding edge got a open cell
foam edge to cancel unwanted reflections...
The speaker cover is the old style so called black fabric, but to me it looks like faded black anodized aluminum, kind of a purplish color that needs to go, so I found some black, real black stuff that should go a long way to modernize the look.
That will do it for now, and I look forward to share the rest of the project very soon...🇸🇪