that's a seriously thick baffle.
Yeah that was Stuart's advice from your thread: http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... ck#p142698
"The front baffle of a soffit needs to be very massive, and very rigid. Mine often end up 40 r even 50mm thick, built up from various layers."
But maybe I'll settle for 36mm, I think that's what you did?
Bass radiates from the woofers outwards in all directions. The bottom edge of the baffle is much nearer the centre of each of the woofers than are the sides or top.
Hi Starlight!
So my understanding was that the plywood sheet just below the speaker (that will have insulation on it) was effectively an extension of the baffle, as well as an absorber for reflections from the mixing desk.
In this thread (https://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/view ... &start=195) Stuart recommends that the speaker be placed 3/5 along the width (slight asymmetry on the baffle plate to offset a possible reinforcement of resonances due to modal actions of the plate) and 1/4 of the height of the baffle. I did wonder why the speaker had to be that far off center height-wise, but if you include the plywood + insulation part below the speaker as part of the total baffle, then it ends up being around 1/2 of the total baffle's height (this would be a problem if the total baffle was one solid plate, but because it's made up of two separate, smaller baffles (the thick baffle plate and the plywood + insulation below it), modal resonance isn't an issue).
Will this shortest distance be the defining limit of an infinite baffle? What distance do these woofers need for an infinite baffle?
Well there has to be an opening of around 30cm in height at the bottom of the soffit, so I guess you could say the total baffle starts where that opening ends? And then the distance from this point to the center of the speaker will be around 1/2 of the total baffle's height, so then you figure out the total height from that?
So if the acoustic axis is usually 120cm off the floor, then by this logic a baffle's height (incl the plywood+insulation part) should always be around 180cm?
I sound unsure because I am someone pls tell me the actual correct answer
The largest possible baffle you could have for the room is one that extends from floor to ceiling, but for rooms that need extensive bass trapping (you could argue all rooms need it, but especially small rooms) it's recommended that you include bass trap cavities at the bottom and top of your soffits which are exposed to the room (which in my case double up as air circulation vents for the speakers)