Phil Starr Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago 23 hours ago, Rosie C said: I share your puzzlement. My 'new' Trace Elliot cabs have substantial metal grilles on them and a 4"x3" brand badge obscuring one of the 10" drivers. To the uneducated it seems like they would obstruct the sound. Any sort of obstruction in front of the speaker affects the sound and if you listen to music then there is an audible difference when you remove the grille. Most Hi-fi buffs will remove them for critical listening and you never see them on studio monitors. However practicality reigns and bare paper cones would last minutes in most gigs never mind rattling around in the back of the van. Quite apart from the resistance to air movement the holes each act as diffraction points and a metal grilla as a diffraction grating. The hole size is important as is the ratio of open space. The effect is most evident at high frequencies and is clearly audible. I look for holes that are as big as possible whilst keeping anything as big as a pencil out. I'd avoid anything with more than 40% of the area covered so not all perforated metal sheet is suitable. Fortunately there isn't much high frequency coming from a bass speaker and so the sound isn't too badly distorted by the grille. Most commercial grilles will be OK so have a look at what the manufacturers do and you should be OK. However I do look at some cabs and wonder if style over substance isn't creeping in. You really don't need to put the badge in front of the cone. 1 Quote
Phil Starr Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago Grille for the BassChat 8 Somebody, I can't remember who, used one of the round grilles for an 18" speaker and hammered it flat, I copied that idea for my cab it's a great way of buying just enough perforated metal to do the job and is purpose designed. it even comes in black £6 https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/126150460308 3 Quote
rwillett Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago @Phil Starr Thanks for this. I'll work out how to mount the grill a few mm back from edges of the speaker cabinet. I should be able to get 15mm from the very front of the speaker to the grill. That's around 21mm from the cone. I'll look around for 10mm perforated aluminum and some acid etching primer. Quote
rwillett Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago I wonder if chicken wire would work? Pros: Cheap, little metal to space ratio, easy to work with. Cons: cheap, might look like crap, would bend easily. Probably better for keeping chickens in than protection. The round speaker grille is great but the delivery is the same price as the grille. 100% delivery costs feels wrong to me for some reason. Quote
LawrenceH Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago (edited) 35 minutes ago, rwillett said: I wonder if chicken wire would work? It did for these guys Edited 6 hours ago by LawrenceH 5 Quote
rwillett Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago (edited) Just looked at whether I could print a decent protective mesh. I could have done some clever measurements but I just plonked the speaker on the print plate. Its a fraction too big for a single print. A 300mm x 300mm printer would handle it, and would be easy to design for but I don't have one. Not sure if I want to glue two pieces together either Back to eBay and silly delivery prices, though as I need two grills I suppose that halves the delivery costs. Yes it's irrational 😁 Rob Edited 4 hours ago by rwillett 1 Quote
Phil Starr Posted 5 hours ago Author Posted 5 hours ago 1 hour ago, rwillett said: I wonder if chicken wire would work? I have contemplated using welded wire mesh, as sold to gardeners. my thought was to use it to protect the speaker but to cover it with fabric. There's a wider range of fabrics available for hi-fi cabs but it's too flimsy to protect your speakers at a gig, a sub layer of mesh could protect the speaker but give you the look of fabric. 2 Quote
nekomatic Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 1 hour ago, rwillett said: The round speaker grille is great but the delivery is the same price as the grille. 100% delivery costs feels wrong to me for some reason. CPC sell them so if you can think of sixteen quid’s worth of other stuff you need from CPC (and who amongst us can’t do that?) then you can get free delivery. To be honest even if you have to pay delivery I’d struggle to find a cheaper way of making a decent grille, as long as you have the means to cut it (I used a Dremel but am sure hacksaw or tinsnips would do). Note that the plastic edging is just a stretch fit around the round grille so you can re-use it (with glue) for the rectangular version. 1 1 Quote
Phil Starr Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/156983722403 A pair with free delivery, eBay is weird and wonderful. I hadn't looked at the delivery but it's fairly normal to see the same item from the same supplier with two different prices and delivery costs but strangely adding up to the same cost. Anyway I just wanted to show you what to search for. Thanks to @nekomatic for the idea which I have unashamedly copied. Beat it flat with a rubber mallet by the way, as the paint comes off fairly easily. It cuts with tin snips and with a disc cutter. Quote
LawrenceH Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Depends how rough you are on your gear but I think the Fender-type grill cloth served well enough for a lot of users. Lightweight, easy to apply, looks classic Quote
rwillett Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago There's some great ideas here. Lots of clever things to try which I would not have thought of. Quote
tauzero Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 21 hours ago, rwillett said: The ^2 notation is nothing to do with imperial or metric but is a computer way of describing something to the power 2. So x^2 means x squared or x x x (which is really confusing) as we sometimes use x to mean times. We could also say x * x. Many computer languages use the ^ symbol as the notation for "to the power of" as you can't use a superscript as languages are based on the ASCII character set. Also can be notated as x**2 (which has strangely moved the asterisks so they aren't level with each other). Quote
rwillett Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 11 minutes ago, tauzero said: Also can be notated as x**2 (which has strangely moved the asterisks so they aren't level with each other). I'd forgotten that one. Which language was that from? Quote
tauzero Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 17 minutes ago, rwillett said: I'd forgotten that one. Which language was that from? It's certainly in COBOL - COMPUTE statement. IIRC it's also in FORTRAN although it's 55 years since I used that. BASIC used ^. Quote
tauzero Posted 52 minutes ago Posted 52 minutes ago Here's the grille I've got - perforated aluminium sheet, 10mm holes, with the speaker on top to give a good idea of scale. Quote
rwillett Posted 45 minutes ago Posted 45 minutes ago That does look good... Very tempting.... Spent an hour before torrential rain hit (again) Glue front and back panel Route the edges so there's a nice curve Nice 6mm routing bit makes this dead easy (as previously suggested) Solder speaker wire to the speaker Fill and sand any problems. Paint front baffle matt black. Take off side handles and rear speakon panel, and paint the wood matt black. I'll mask this area off before the Armacab goes on. Assemble, check all OK Check it all works. Wait for warm weather to do the Armacab. - July 2027? Quote
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