[HAM] **SPAM(5.1)** Venting a homemade Leslie boxBill Odum bilyod2002 at yahoo.comWed Nov 29 13:46:52 CST 2006
If you will notice --- Leslies have louvers cut in them on three sides for the sound to come out. That goes for the top spinning horn and the bottom rotor both. The upper and lower back is completely open with louvered coveres.. A lot of players remove the backs and turn the leslie around backwards for the sound to come out better to the audience.. I have taken an old leslie and made it into two parts. The upper in one box and the lower in the other. This is to make it more portable and easier to move around. None of the openings are for venting. It does not need venting. Bill . Stainless Brown <stainlessbrown at sbcglobal.net> wrote: Lou I'm not sure if this will help, however I have a Model 18, single rotor (drum) the motor is on the nback side of the baffle and pretty much "sealed" into the back of the cabinet (The model 18 has the drum mounted horizontally (spinning axis) rather than vertical, like most other Leslies) I jusy dismantled a Leslie x77P for the parts to build a smaller more portable Lelsie. The top twin rotor, likewise had the motor underneath in a sectionof the cabinet with no external venting I'm guessing unless you're housing a power amp with tubes, transformers, or heat sinks in the cabinet, venting for airflow won't be an issue. Typically, most of the sound is "thrown" perpendicular to the speaker, or in the event you have a rotating drum with the internal mounted speaker (can't remember what Leslie called this) then all sound is from the 'side ' of the drum. Hope this is of some help. Stan Lou Lernor wrote: Hello: I thought you might be able to advise me about a Leslie. I found you off of one of the Leslie pages. I bought a used tremelo unit and decided to build a box for it. I just dont know what kind of venting to cut out of the box. If I cut out just one side of the box, the front where the rotating baffle will expose the music every 180 degrees, will I have a vacuum problem because the box could use a vent cut on the opposite side of the box to allow better airflow? Or will an opening on just the front be good enough? I was thinking of cutting about five horizontal slots, about an inch high and eight inches wide, where the baffle opening of the baffle will expose closest to the front of the box. Or should I cut out an open area and install some sort of screen? If you ever made a box for a Leslie, then you once faced these same questions. Any advise? Lou Lernor -- Subscription Options/Unsubscribe/Archives: http://www.zeni.net/hf/ Hammond-Leslie FAQ: http://theatreorgans.com/hammond/faq/ HammondWiki: http://www.dairiki.org/HammondWiki/ hammond at zk3.dec.com archives: http://zk3.hammondforum.com/ -- Subscription Options/Unsubscribe/Archives: http://www.zeni.net/hf/ Hammond-Leslie FAQ: http://theatreorgans.com/hammond/faq/ HammondWiki: http://www.dairiki.org/HammondWiki/ hammond at zk3.dec.com archives: http://zk3.hammondforum.com/ --------------------------------- Check out the all-new Yahoo! Mail beta - Fire up a more powerful email and get things done faster.
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