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Beam Blocker Design

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  • Beam Blocker Design

    Hi there folks

    After having a few jams with the 5F2A I recently built, and getting some criticism about the piercing treble response it gives when you are standing directly in front of it about 10-20 feet away. Titling the cab back to point it at the ceiling is a temporary fix and can be somewhat unstable, so I was thinking I might try a beam blocker.

    Can anyone enlighten me about the theory behind beam blocker design, and for a 12" diam speaker in a tweed princeton, what size beam blocker might be good. (1"?, 2"? etc?)

    Cheers
    Building a better world (one tube amp at a time)

    "I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo

  • #2
    The idea of the "beam blocker" is to difuse the high frequencies that come out of the center of the speaker.www.tedweber.com has them for sale,if you check his site,it may give you an idea of what size it should be.I would imagine it should cover the center "dust cap" of the speaker,so I think that would be more important than the speaker size itself.I have heard of some people just putting a piece of duct tape on the grill in front of the center of the speaker to accomplish the same effect.

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    • #3
      This another approach :



      for these speakers:



      Alf

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      • #4
        Wow! those are nice Alf

        Seeing your design I am curious about whether there are any differences between a vertical (as opposed to horizontal or diagonal) support strut?

        Cheers
        Building a better world (one tube amp at a time)

        "I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo

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        • #5
          Tubeswell,

          It doesn't make any difference , I made them vertically because Vox used the struts, without the circles, in their earlier days.

          The cabinet is a sort of oversized cabinet to be used with an open back.

          It sounds already very nice as it is.
          Of course this way it's easy to experiment with lager circles because there's something to attach them to.

          Alf

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          • #6
            what i did was take an aluminium dustcap (the guy who i got it from removed it from a JBL K120 to cut out the top end and replaced it with a cardboard dustcap. So, i simply took the aluminium dustcap and glued it onto the inside of the grille cloth on my fender performer 1000 combo amp, right in the centre of the grille. Made a great positive difference
            Amps: 15 Watt DIMCO valve amp made in New Zealand in the '60s, Fender Performer 1000, Sovtek Mig-50.
            Guitars: Fender USA American Standard Strat and Tele, LTD MV-200 (Modded), Ibanez S Series (modded), and cheap Cort acoustic with Fishman.

            Play hard, sound good

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            • #7
              Hi all,
              What I use as a beam blocker is a CD in the front grill.
              If the cab has a grill, I would simply attach with velco a regular CD or maybe a small (80mm) CD like in the picture:



              Regards,
              TMP

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