I bought an old table saw and made a sled, but then remembered that my brother now owns a company that makes composite moulds for Formula 1 racing teams, so his workshop would be better than mine!
I used Goodreader to annotate the PDF plans with metric measurements, then drew every part in qCAD. Sent the DXF files to my brother, where he extruded then I to 3d. No angles were included, although the CNC machine would easily do it, it was quicker to cut them on the table saw, rather than me learning to code in 3d.
It was beginning to look like we wouldn't be able to do the build for a while, when the call came - "tomorrow"!
We had two nail guns fail and the machine refused to pickup tools, but I came away from a long day with a square box.

Setting up the vacuum bed to hold the MDF substrate.

The spacers ready to be cut.
http://youtu.be/hoHH_jE4Ic0[/youtube]
Cutting the horn braces.

Sanding the baffle. Look at that mahoosive sanding wheel!

Lots of clamps and mould blocks to hold the baffle square.
As we finally put the box together, we hit the first snag. The baffle was about 3mm short


Back at home the next day, the baffle had tight fitting spacers glued.
Then the next snag - the top hat was sitting too high. I wondered about changing the duct length to clear, but, after consulting Bill, I'm just going to let it stick out, maybe with a little housing (thanks Bruce).

Test bending the sheath.
Various ideas were tried before gluing the sheathes. I eventually went for three spacer blocks against the baffle to hold the sheathes tight, then a couple of cheap "rat shit" straps to hold it all tight.as we were bending, I put a lot of staples in, everyone hitting the mark.
The straps seemed to hold the sheath well, so I did the second side without staples, and it was a much cleaner job.

All the staples removed.