responsive cone, light for the motor size.
any shorting ring/faraday work?
is the front plate thicker than it appears due to basket machining?
what is the mission for these middle pack, AE similar consumer target demographic?
responsive cone, light for the motor size.
any shorting ring/faraday work?
is the front plate thicker than it appears due to basket machining?
what is the mission for these middle pack, AE similar consumer target demographic?
There's no shorting ring or Faraday work.
The top plate is 8mm thick. Nothing goes up into the basket.
I'm not aware of any "mission" with it. Especially since they didn't even exist a couple weeks ago. It's just his entry level driver that utilizes an energy flow specific pole motor similar to the SHD (which is the 4" coil, 5,000w rms monster).
Hey Taylor, do any of the tantric subs implement that sort of technology?
Sent from my Springfield XD with love!
The SHD is the only one that I know of that utilizes a shorting ring. If the others don't, it's for a reason.
The upcoming "UHD" will also feature a shorting ring. But I'm sure no one on this board is interested in a 100lb cobalt motor. Lol.
Cobalt?!
That stuff will kill you.
Sent from my Springfield XD with love!
Permendur or Hiperco 50, or whatever, is the stuff used in Lowther drivers. Apparently the stuff is pretty pricey but it's the highest magnetic conductive stuff to make motors with.
using it in a stacked configuration like JBL's Everest or whatever, midranges, could achieve measurable advances in the "what's possible" department.
I would think blanks could be made from hydro-stamped mold that would keep the machining down, but the government has a market restriction on cobalt?
I hope neodymium drops from it's excessively priced import status, as China's the main supply..
Till neo drops price, without mad tooling, ferrite is still king. Stacking sure looks cool, but the name of the game is putting a strong field in the gap.
And honestly, those putting "slug" after "slug" on the backside of a frame are not necessarily doing that.
There's a LOT of math involved in getting that gap symmetric and right (that's what she said) and these guys stacking magnets on ebay are not of the finest.
Some copper in the motor wold not hurt... AE and Fi seems to have the IB sub market cornered.... There are home users too.
Just sayin... The price point in production is kinda low due to the smaller motor........
Last edited by chad; 08-04-2013 at 05:12 PM.
Not to derail the thread away from the LD or IB in general, but just wanted to touch on the cobalt thing.
I'm not sure if this is a "grade" of cobalt or a type or whatever, but I know its Sumarian cobalt and we've already tested a prototype in a radial design. The motor architecture isn't exactly new, but this is just the easiest way to make a radial motor and like I said, it was just to test materials.
Those are cobalt slugs up near the top of the structure. And let me tell you, the motor force is nothing to be trifled with. This thing was nasty.
samarium cobalt, is a 28 MgOe or whatever, material
costly, they were used in the dome midranges of the Infinity polydome series
more powah than ferrite, but not as strong as neodymium.
there are natural structural dimensional criteria for magnetic substances, or substrate.
like, alnico likes a rod form factor, samarium cobalt I don't know, neodymium works well in blanks, I guess it matters how they sinter the material while it's being forged or baked.
it's funny stuff, how you can break a magnet and the piece that breaks off has a north and a south orientation...