Originally posted by Steve Conner
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Seriously, though, you have to pay close attention to how they choose theier words. They say some very interesting things. for example:
... the frequencies at which Thiele Small parameters have significance are mostly below the [guitar's] operating range.
Later on, they go on to say something that's more interesting -- if you read between the lines, it sounds like they're trying not to admit exactly why they don't want to provide their T-S numbers:
Care should be exercised designing ported (or reflex) cabinets for guitar speakers as the increased cone excursion below the tuning frequency can cause speaker damage.
YIKES!!!
Looking at the numbers, the EVM-12L is happy as a clam to live in a T-S array, and the Eminence Greenback-clones will probably blow up if you hit them with any real amount of power below the port tuning frequency. Celestion won't even tell you how to calculate the box tuning frequency, because they just don't want you to go there. Their numbers must be really, really, BAD.
That's too bad. Using the EVM-12L as a guinea pig, I crunched some T-S calculations and found that I could easily cure the boominess problem with surgical precision by porting the cab. My calculations showed that a 6-inch port 6-inches long would tune the box in step-down mode so that rolloff started at about 200 Hz and removed 5 dB of frequency response between 80 and 160 Hz. That would have been a wonderfully precise solution to the boominess problem. Its too bad that a mathematical approach to the problem is likely to blow up my Greenbacks. Sigh.
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