@panzrwagn I remember seeing old stories and photos of home audio systems in rooms with opposing corners. Thereʻs really no point in having K-horns unless you have two corners to put them in. Way Back When, Klipsch tried promoting the 3 channel setup with K-horns in opposing corners and a single Cornwall in the middle. The Fisher 500C receiver had a mixed, line level center output that youʻd run to a monoblock amp to drive the Cornwall with.
It has been a long time since I listened to K-horns, but my memory was of a mid-range that had a nasal quality to it.
Iʻm not at all against transmission lines because they need a lot of power to run. I just donʻt like the designs with 7" bass drivers in a transmission line. You may get very deep bass, but not a lot of level. Thereʻs no replacement for displacement.
Back in the late 70ʻs, sub-woofers were mostly DIY projects. The Holy Grail sub from that time was an enormous transmission line with a single 24" Hartley bass driver.
Differences Between Folded Horn Speakers and Transmission Line Speakers
I've been looking at various DIY speaker builds and came across a folder horn speaker and I've also seen transmission line speakers. I've tried to google the differences in the two, as they look similar, but I suspect that there are differences. The only visual difference that I've noticed (I've only seen one folded horn, so the comparison pool is very small) is that the folded horn seem to have a larger opening than the transmission line speakers. Maybe it's just the one speaker that I saw, so I don't know that would always be the case. I'm hoping someone on the forum is much more knowledgeable about these things than I am.
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- 45 posts total
- 45 posts total

