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AST0801 Foldback wedge-----------------------This page still under construction---------------------------------------Parts required: B&C 8CX21 8" Co-axial speaker 17mm void free Plywood - 1 x 1200 x 2400mm (4 foot by 8 foot) sheet is enough for 6 wedges 9mm Plywood 2 x cabinet mount Speakon sockets 8 x 3/16" Tee nuts (I could not get Tee nuts in metric) 8 x 3/16" by 25mm long Bolts 2 x 1/4" Tee nuts 2 x 1/4" by 25mm long Bolts 4 x 1/4" Washers Tube of 'Liquid nails' or equivalent Builders glue. Senseal or equivalent epoxy Resin Lamp or Carbon Black Hard wearing paint Plastic wood or 'Builders bog' (unless you are far better at wood work than me) Passive Crossover 1.5mm2 insulated wire - two 1.5m lengths in different colours should do Design: Anyone who has runs smaller systems would know that the lower Frequencies from foldback is often clearly audible to the audience usually in the form of a muffled sound that has the muddying the Front of house sound. This muddy sound is generally in the frequency range below 300Hz and the irony is that usually Singers and musicians do not need to hear much of this through their foldback and often what they do want to hear bleeds back from Front of House anyway. The upshot of this is that there is little or no point designing a foldback speaker that goes significantly below 150Hz - OK, possible exceptions here are for things like Drum fill, but for Vocals (the main requirement for Foldback), Guitars and keyboards, Foldback does not require much bottom end. Another common issue with less expensive Foldback wedges is that it is often possible to hear that the Tweeter and woofer are in different places, this can be very disconcerting especially if the performer moves around at all. I have been meaning to play around with Co-axial drivers for a while and this gave me an ideal opportunity. while the crossover took a bit of fiddling to get sounding nice the final version was surprisingly much simpler than I had anticipated. Before we go on - all woodworking dimensions here are given in Millimetres and click on any Cutting up the wood: I got the wood from a local 'Mr Plywood' store, in order to make it easier to transport I got it pre cut - note they do not cut angles which meant that I still had more cutting to do when I got the wood home. For anyone interested I had them cut up the wood as per the following Diagram: Cut up the 580 x 280mm sheets into smaller pieces for the body of the wedge these will need to be cut at an angle - note the cut between piece A and B is 15 degrees from vertical and the cut between C and D is 30 degrees while the cut between B and C is vertical (as per the side view at the top of this picture): While cutting wood at an angle take the long offcut (from the top of the panel) and cut it lengthwise down the middle at an angle of 30 degrees. this should give you two lengths of wood about 2400mm in length and somewhere near 30-40mm wide. The 430 x 280 pieces become the side panels and these require very careful measurement. Note: do not drill or cutout the handle, connector holes or speaker stand mounting holes at thisd {5FB 7F034-2C 63-45e9- BE91-3D4 4E2C707E 4} ActidveK U2 WLx 8X booleannsta nceName ' %Str ing 5v X T YQMLX Z:R; *E &= 9W XI SOST0 2@?A + sL/!t WmiM@ethodI@_I mplemented P RIMUS-92 B28638 ROOT\wmi u@Fa2 `"@ &** _ _PARAMET ERS abstractW InData objeN@J FtG inJoGIDL) H^#:g(I???*5__|1>4!>;>`>> ` >Out?cr3ouG*?aZR ;? "?b#Q&? 0 ???+i?4!-!Z#@%aaa a` T˟"( t4o DOdOdPD DOd]&D ZdDDaD jdD D`N QS_ D1280ۀ D1 D0o%o%0 o%o% o%o%/jD K%DC%jX *%? odRjdD0Da)??cdD2D DDD#Dcd 9S_ DID02+ֱD1>8 DD%%q?P%%割 Data object ` E 2 in+ T DYL h IDZ) .Z Z A:hpqBInI__ P RIMUS-92 B28638 ROOT\wmi 7$[ $ * (܀ __P ARAMETER S abstrFa9Out%3q ou J~Z b~@ HB~ |