Here is where I was thinking. Excuse the crude illustration and incorrect scale.fitzwaddle wrote:You mean mount the amp in that long / sealed triangle next to the mouth (between 9, 10 and the side)?tomsza wrote:I bought the Bash plate amp for this thing and I'm thinking of adding a plywood panel to put in front of panel #10 and mounting the amp to that. Is there anything wrong with doing this? Like vibration damage?
THT-LP (26" wide)
Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
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Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
Seems like it would work - but of course you'd need to work out a path to run the wiring from the amp to the driver chamber, and seal off those holes - not sure if that's OK or not. Seems like the amp would be OK since its a sealed off part of the cabinet - assuming its deep enough.
Caveat: I'm just speculating, Bill or one of the builders feel free to tell me I'm full of it.
Caveat: I'm just speculating, Bill or one of the builders feel free to tell me I'm full of it.
Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
If it fits, no problem. Like it was mentioned before, you might have a ground loop problem.tomsza wrote: Here is where I was thinking. Excuse the crude illustration and incorrect scale.
TomS
Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
The biggest problem with an in-cabinet plate amp will be ground-loop hum, as the sub placement will, in all likelihood, be nowhere near the rest of the components.
I know money often seals the deal, but seriously, quality is an investment, not an expense... Grant Bunter
Accept the fact that airtight and well-braced are more important than pretty on the inside. Bill Fitzmaurice
Accept the fact that airtight and well-braced are more important than pretty on the inside. Bill Fitzmaurice
Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
In my case, this monster is going behind my ht stuff in a corner.DJPhatman wrote:The biggest problem with an in-cabinet plate amp will be ground-loop hum, as the sub placement will, in all likelihood, be nowhere near the rest of the components.
Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
Last peek at the innards before I button up the side.
Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
Let the putty and sanding begin. The spot for the amp looks pretty good.
Cabinet Stand
I put on the first coat of satin black last night and this puppy looks great. I read that for down firing, the mouth should be a minimum of 18" from the floor. Is there an optimum distance from the floor for this horn? I'm going to weld up a stand and I'm wondering if I should make it capable of height adjustment.
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Re: Cabinet Stand
That depends on whether it's wall or corner loaded and the cab width. You don't want the area of the opening between the bottom of the cab and the floor smaller than that of the mouth.tomsza wrote:I put on the first coat of satin black last night and this puppy looks great. I read that for down firing, the mouth should be a minimum of 18" from the floor. Is there an optimum distance from the floor for this horn?
Re: Cabinet Stand
It appears it will be corner loaded (see illustration 5 posts up).Bill Fitzmaurice wrote:That depends on whether it's wall or corner loaded and the cab width. You don't want the area of the opening between the bottom of the cab and the floor smaller than that of the mouth.tomsza wrote:I put on the first coat of satin black last night and this puppy looks great. I read that for down firing, the mouth should be a minimum of 18" from the floor. Is there an optimum distance from the floor for this horn?
Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
So if corner loaded, with a cabinet opening area of ~18"x26", it appears the minimum height would be ~10.64". That would save me some metal. 

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Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
What about having the mouth pointing up instead?
Simpler to build, less visual impact (it'll sit lower behind the TV), and it'll still be corner-loaded by the ceiling corner.
Just put a screen on the mouth ("pet screen" or similar) to keep anything from falling into the horn.
Simpler to build, less visual impact (it'll sit lower behind the TV), and it'll still be corner-loaded by the ceiling corner.
Just put a screen on the mouth ("pet screen" or similar) to keep anything from falling into the horn.
Built: THTLP 36"
Authorized BFM Builder
Authorized BFM Builder
Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
That is an option. This room has a 12.5' cathedral ceiling and was thinking I might get better sound quality down firing. Reversing it would be more visually appealing. Where I plan on mounting the amp, it would still be out of site.Michel Goudeseune wrote:What about having the mouth pointing up instead?
Simpler to build, less visual impact (it'll sit lower behind the TV), and it'll still be corner-loaded by the ceiling corner.
Just put a screen on the mouth ("pet screen" or similar) to keep anything from falling into the horn.
- subharmonic
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Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
I like up firing with that nice angle corner seems like it may be the perfect extension to the horn path.
2x T39, 1x T60, 1x THTLP, 1x AT(not built by me) 6x DR250
I need more bass
But this gal's built like a burlap bag full of bobcats
CW Mcall
I need more bass
But this gal's built like a burlap bag full of bobcats
CW Mcall
Re: THT-LP (26" wide)
Sounds like a plan to start with. I just put the second coat of black on the cab. Tomorrow I'll do a little driver break-in and this big guy should be ready for prime time on Sunday.subharmonic wrote:I like up firing with that nice angle corner seems like it may be the perfect extension to the horn path.
