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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
Sand filling of speakers
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<blockquote data-quote="Ampdog" data-source="post: 842383" data-attributes="member: 144"><p>Perhaps a less important point, but one must not confuse rigidity with weight.</p><p></p><p>On can get great rigidity from e.g. a webbed construction made of light wood or even cast polyester without the weight. Sure, both are required, but more weight as in ever smaller pellets of a heavy material might not necessarily add rigidity in equal degree (though for a loudspeaker enclosure quite sufficient). Take ever smaller 'pellets' in increasing volume and what does one get: A fluid! </p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ampdog, post: 842383, member: 144"] Perhaps a less important point, but one must not confuse rigidity with weight. On can get great rigidity from e.g. a webbed construction made of light wood or even cast polyester without the weight. Sure, both are required, but more weight as in ever smaller pellets of a heavy material might not necessarily add rigidity in equal degree (though for a loudspeaker enclosure quite sufficient). Take ever smaller 'pellets' in increasing volume and what does one get: A fluid! [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
Sand filling of speakers
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