Soft soffit mounting?
Posted: Sat Jul 03, 2004 2:09 am
Ok, Barefoot, here's your chance to shoot down a wild theory. But let me know if this idea has any merit...
I'd like to soffit-mount my Mackie HR824s- even if it's just to reclaim a little floor area. Giles was able to do this, but I can't figure out how he keeps 'em from overheating- unless he's got a small circulation system set up for them (the thought has crossed my mind... my day job of architecture has presented greater design challenges). At one point, I had resigned myself to stand-mounting them and using a mid-field setup, but I'm not ready to give up on soffiting them just yet.
In reading another post where someone had built baffles for their speakers, I saw your notes about making the front face 4 or 5 times the size of the woofer, because of the way a hard surface would interact with the sound coming out of the speaker. It got me wondering if using a soft wall would be a viable alternative.
I was thinking of using a 12" deep wall (whether built out of 2x12s or just a pair of 2x4 stud walls with each stud cavity filled completely with fiberglass blankets, and then with 1" rigid fiberglass on the face of the wall. In this wall would be the speaker. Instead of a hard surface for low frequencies to have to work their way around before reaching the listening position, there would be a thick absorber for it to get thru. If this was placed in a corner, it'd double as a general bass trap. And the space behind this wall could be open above- in a high-ceiling room, the soffit-wall could go up 8' and leave the rest open.
I guess what I'm asking is this- would mounting the speakers like this cause more problems than they solved? Is this the kind of thing we'd have to build and test out? Would it be better to build a solid front face, and just leave enough space behind the wall for the speaker to breathe?
Thanks for the time and thought...
I'd like to soffit-mount my Mackie HR824s- even if it's just to reclaim a little floor area. Giles was able to do this, but I can't figure out how he keeps 'em from overheating- unless he's got a small circulation system set up for them (the thought has crossed my mind... my day job of architecture has presented greater design challenges). At one point, I had resigned myself to stand-mounting them and using a mid-field setup, but I'm not ready to give up on soffiting them just yet.
In reading another post where someone had built baffles for their speakers, I saw your notes about making the front face 4 or 5 times the size of the woofer, because of the way a hard surface would interact with the sound coming out of the speaker. It got me wondering if using a soft wall would be a viable alternative.
I was thinking of using a 12" deep wall (whether built out of 2x12s or just a pair of 2x4 stud walls with each stud cavity filled completely with fiberglass blankets, and then with 1" rigid fiberglass on the face of the wall. In this wall would be the speaker. Instead of a hard surface for low frequencies to have to work their way around before reaching the listening position, there would be a thick absorber for it to get thru. If this was placed in a corner, it'd double as a general bass trap. And the space behind this wall could be open above- in a high-ceiling room, the soffit-wall could go up 8' and leave the rest open.
I guess what I'm asking is this- would mounting the speakers like this cause more problems than they solved? Is this the kind of thing we'd have to build and test out? Would it be better to build a solid front face, and just leave enough space behind the wall for the speaker to breathe?
Thanks for the time and thought...