It is intended as an implementation of Bob Brines' design procedure as outlined in the " Port placement in a straight MLTL" thread on DIY Audio and a first draft of a speaker design. It is aimed at the DIY speaker designer who is already familiar with MathCad and able to work with Martin J. This page is intended as a "Getting Started Guide" for MLTL design. For details, as well as other options for how to obtain MathCad, see Martin J. If you do not have access to MathCad, MathSoft makes a MathCad viewer available, which allows you to work with the programs and perform all the needed simulations. King, Mass Loaded Transmission Line (MLTL) speakers are now relatively straight-forword to design for the DIY audio enthusiast. Thanks to a collection of MathCad programs developed by Martin J. However, rather than engaging in a lengthy discussion on naming conventions, I will use the term MLTL to describe a ported quarter-wave enclosure. Now, some may argue that this is a bass reflex enclosure - and the line is indeed a bit blurry. Basically, an MLTL is a quarter-wave transmission line enclosure with a port. There are several types of transmission line enclosures and one of the more popular ones is the mass loaded transmission line (MLTL). Quarter-wave transmission line speakers employ enclosures that are tuned to provide low-frequency extension for the speaker driver. Purifi 1ET400A / Hypex NC500 Input Buffer
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