- #1
jakksincorpse
- 74
- 0
Okay, this is going to be one hell of a skeptical thread.
Being a musician and all i have music software that enables me to manipulate sound
As of now, I've manipulated a Bass note in C to a harmonic oscillation(sp?) ranging from >0hz to 500hz. I've got it just to were the noise won't clip. i have MAJOR db's in that range of hz, 130hz being the highest of db.
i've noticed that this is EXTREMELY LOUD. and the pulses of the resonance push a lot of matter from the speaker gate where my hand is about an inch away from the gate.
besides the whole room shaking, its pretty neat. for only coming out of 2 15" speakers.
so i was thinking. what if i emit this sound through a huge speaker. (biggest I've found was 32") and reduce the cubic size of the speaker using a cone looking funnel to channel the resonance downwards. could i make this thing gravitate?
i mean okay. for anyone who has a volume control on your computer. My macbookpro has 16 volume bars to go up and down. I'm running my music and sound through a mixer board and into 2 15" speakers. bar 14 is pretty loud when playing music. with this C note, I'm on bar 1 and my walls are shaking. that's how loud this is.
I saw a thing on tv that was about using oscillations to gravitate a styrofoam cup. he was talking about how very little power this used and what little resonance he was using to gravitate the styrofoam cup.
so fella's, could my music take me sky high or am i going to be grounded with a headache.
Being a musician and all i have music software that enables me to manipulate sound
As of now, I've manipulated a Bass note in C to a harmonic oscillation(sp?) ranging from >0hz to 500hz. I've got it just to were the noise won't clip. i have MAJOR db's in that range of hz, 130hz being the highest of db.
i've noticed that this is EXTREMELY LOUD. and the pulses of the resonance push a lot of matter from the speaker gate where my hand is about an inch away from the gate.
besides the whole room shaking, its pretty neat. for only coming out of 2 15" speakers.
so i was thinking. what if i emit this sound through a huge speaker. (biggest I've found was 32") and reduce the cubic size of the speaker using a cone looking funnel to channel the resonance downwards. could i make this thing gravitate?
i mean okay. for anyone who has a volume control on your computer. My macbookpro has 16 volume bars to go up and down. I'm running my music and sound through a mixer board and into 2 15" speakers. bar 14 is pretty loud when playing music. with this C note, I'm on bar 1 and my walls are shaking. that's how loud this is.
I saw a thing on tv that was about using oscillations to gravitate a styrofoam cup. he was talking about how very little power this used and what little resonance he was using to gravitate the styrofoam cup.
so fella's, could my music take me sky high or am i going to be grounded with a headache.