Rerurn to Romy the Cat's Site


In the Forum: Horn-Loaded Speakers
In the Thread: Macondo’s Midbass Project – the grown up time.
Post Subject: This is as idiotic as it I could be.Posted by Romy the Cat on: 9/14/2010
fiogf49gjkf0d
 Romy the Cat wrote:

Midbass_progress_95.JPG

Practically all surfaces of horns are sanded and relatively good looking, I was priming today the rest of the horns. I was priming it as was thinking how much I got worse. Formerly I was listening some music at this part of day but nowadays I am partially covered with pain was manufacturing tools that would let me to stick myself into the horn. My apologies that I did not make a video of it - trust me you do not what to see it. The problem is that the horns are assembled I can’t reach the section 2 and 3. A roll or a brash on boom helps to a point but there are some locations where boom is useless, it is not to mention that the horn has a few degree curves after the section 5. I kind of a large fellow and I can stick myself into the horn up to the point. Then I begin to slide back. As you can see the horn curves down a lot, the back chamber is all the way up. The biggest curve down in the sections 6 and 7 and this is where my heaviest part is – stomach lies what I am stretched in the horn. So, since I have no support to push myself forward to the section 2 I truly was not able to prime it. I try a few ad-hog methods to stick myself into the horn but they did not work. After some consideration and some fight with my own embracing I found ridiculously effective way to prime the sections 2 and 3 – I dived into the horn. I undressed, spayed the sections 7 to 4 with water, run into the horn with extended arm and let myself to slide in. As a result I have 2-3 seconds in the horn where my hand, in fact fingers, can paint something. I t is in way funny and stupid but it is what it is….

Rerurn to Romy the Cat's Site