Hello all, Im new to this forum, but have spent a fair amount of time reading up. I have never built a speaker myself, but I am fairly confident that it can be done. Im hoping you might be able to point me in the right direction for a "jumping off" point.
I currently use a Yamaha HTR-5990, a set of Klipsch Chorus II loudspeakers as my fronts, and a weak in comparison JBL center. I am really wondering where to go with replacing the center channel. Id like to stay with a horn design if that is a feasible option for a beginner. I honestly just dont even know where to look or what type of speakers to use.
Size is not an issue, and I could go buy some great speakers at a much reduced price at work, so a $400 cap is about all I will spend. Id like to keep it below $200 if possible.
Any recommendations would be much appreciated, and thank you all for the help Ive already received just from reading up on this forum.
Honestly I don't think that is a practical project. Horn speakers have a definite sonic signature, so matching is very difficult.
Your speakers are a 20 year old design. It uses a type of woofer not generally available now. It has mid and HF horns crossing over at 600 Hz and 5 kHz. I know of no consumer horns available now for a design like that.
If you were very experienced you might be able to replicate it from professional components, however, you would never do it on that budget. The speaker would be larger, and your budget would need to increase 10 fold.
This would not be a design anyone could attempt to steer you through long range, and I would not even try.
Your best bet is to build or buy a new set of front speakers.
Sorry, but that project is a pipe dream.
Obviously you are budget conscious. I posted
these designs this weekend, for the budget conscious.
These speakers are about the lowest cost for a DIY project you can get. They would also be a nice upgrade from what you have now, bu they will sound very different to your current speakers.
If you built the a pair of the two cu.ft MTMs for your mains, and then used the MTM design in a I cu. ft. enclosure you would come out pretty close to your $400 budget. I doubt you would exceed it by $50 for everything.
If you are interested I will work out the porting for a center 1 cu. ft center.
That project would be a very good starter project and you would be astounded at the results you get, and not just for the money.