Originally posted by Dennis H
T-Line is a word for any acoustic design, where the radiation impedance changes sharply from a defined constant value to the impedance of full space (free air). If it would change smoothly, it would be called a horn.
Even without wings the driver on an open baffle "sees" a radiation impedance of "half-space" up to the edge of the baffle, where it abruptly changes to full space. My conclusion: Even if there is no "length" of the TL, the correction factor "+ 0.6 x reffective" would still apply - with maybe 0.6 changed to some smaller factor.
In the light of this there will be no much difference between the frequency of the quarter-wavelength t-line and the dipole peak frequency of the corresponding H frame. It would certainly NOT be possible to have a H frame that could "help in killing that (dipole) null".
My prior statement "You can easily imagine how both length differ with different H frame geometries" was plainly wrong.
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