The room looks kinda tight for 7.1, but it's also kinda cool that you fit it all in. Am I correct in guessing that the Primus are going to get some type of WmAx upgrade?
This is a multi-stage upgrade. Aversfi is performing all labor. I am a consultant on this project. Ultimately, this will be a very high end, incredibly linear monopole system with extremely wide dispersion(
imagine no more than 2db variation at even 70 degrees horizontal at 15khz) and virtually no resonances to cause timbre distortion/coloration. The Primus 360 was chosen because it has incredibly high quality mid-range drivers(
that are simply excellent, regardless of any price), and a moderate quality tweeter(
that will be changed out later) with a decent crossover(
which will be later removed and replaced with full active DSP crossover) that will provide moderately high level sound quality until the final stages are complete to make this into an extremely high quality speaker system that should rival any monopole for sound quality, regardless of price.
The stages of up-grade:
1) High grade, virtually inert cabinet system with no audible resonance(s).
2) Replacement of stock tweeter with a wide dispersion specific model planar tweeter(the cabinet is being built to facilitate this option later).
3) Replacement of stock xover system with fully active DSP crossover.
4) Build stereo subwoofers and relieve the main channels of bass duty.
Preliminary cabinet details:
-1" HDF woofer section with 2" metal C-channel, 1/4" thick, every 2" spaced vertically epoxied to the HDF inner walls. 2"x2" oak connecting all walls at no more than 3-4" spacing, in X, Y and Z axis(matrix cage), except for driver clearance, of course.
-Mid/tweeter module uses same bracing construction, with an additional external layer of HDF with a constrained damping layer between the two units.
-4" radius on front vertical edges of cabinet, to facilitate the wide off axis response of the non-wave guided planar tweeter to be added later.
-Suspension between woofer module and midrange module. The woofer module is intended to be engineered to push the wall resonances well over the bandwidth of the woofers. The mid-range module must not excite the band of resonances that still exist above this range, thus a suspension will de-couple the two units.
-Chris