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Has anyone tried making the shell be part of the box? I was picturing a design where the entire box/speaker assembly is turned upside down and the ceiling of the shell formed the base of the box, and the speaker is firing upward into the box/shell. It would require the base of the box frame be profiled to the shape of the ceiling to maintain a seal (which could be challenging), but the acoustic coupling to the shell would be much more direct and controlled. This is basically how the piezo wafer speakers are intended to work.
I think I should mention something about totally sealed speaker enclosures. The atmospheric pressure changes quite a bit depending on the weather. Those pesky highs and lows. The internal pressure in the enclosure will be whatever the barometric pressure was on the day it was sealed. Then when the ambient pressure is higher, the speaker cone will not longer be in a neutral position - it will be pressed in. Reverse will happen when the barometric pressure is lower than the pressure inside the enclosure. That might cause distortion since the speaker cone will have limited travel in one direction. I recommend a small pinhole (like #80 drill size or smaller) opening to equalize the pressures.
@jdcolombo is there an optimal thickness for the enclosure wall?TIA,Ed
Tim,I'm not talking about tiny "holes" just single small hole. 0.013" or smaller. But if you think the actual speakers are not all that well sealed, then that will allow for the pressures to equalize.
It's pretty daunting how many combinations of channel levels there are to assess though. Even if you reduce it to the 10 most important channels and say that each can be only low, medium, or high, you're still talking about 3^10 = 59,049 possible combinations!
Doug, I share your skepticism about on-board sound, but I am coming around to it in certain circumstances. At low volumes, your brain can fill in a lot of detail, and the resulting power of suggestion can be quite dramatic. But there is a fine line between dramatic and irritating! For filling in the bass, I do think a set of well-placed sub-woofers around the layout (a la SurroundTraxx) could be used quite effectively. It's something I hope to explore some day.I tried an implementation of Lance's headphone sound at Mark Dance's layout a few years back and I didn't like it at all. (Mark didn't really, either.) It certainly produces a full rich sound, but the effect of having the sound in your head while the loco is 'out there' is disorienting. It felt like you were inside the loco itself, while at the same time it was off in the distance there. I also didn't care for the isolating effect of the headphones while you were around other people in an operating session -- which is a social event, after all. (I have the same feeling about wearing headphones outside. I don't like to be cut off from the environment.)
I tried an implementation of Lance's headphone sound at Mark Dance's layout a few years back and I didn't like it at all. (Mark didn't really, either.) It certainly produces a full rich sound, but the effect of having the sound in your head while the loco is 'out there' is disorienting. It felt like you were inside the loco itself, while at the same time it was off in the distance there. I also didn't care for the isolating effect of the headphones while you were around other people in an operating session -- which is a social event, after all. (I have the same feeling about wearing headphones outside. I don't like to be cut off from the environment.)