http://www.bcae1.com/frequncy.htm
Scroll 1/4 ned på siden, og der fremkommer en kalkulatinsbox, hvor du kan plotte en hvilken som helst frekvens ind, og få bølgelængden i FOD. 1 fod er 0.3048m. DVS gang resultatet med 0.3 og du har bølgelængden i meter.
Eksempel: 35Hz giver en bølgelængde på 9.6m. Så vil du lave et ægte 1/4 bølge horn, der som allerlaveste frekvens gengiver 35Hz (adskillige dB svækket), skal "gangen" være 2.4m lang. OMVENDT, kunne du jo vælge at kalde det et 140Hz helbølgehorn.
Voight-horn er "cheap-trick". Med visse undtagelser, forstærker et Voight-horn mere i mellembassen og mellemtone end i det egntlige basområde. (højest ujævn frekvensgang)
Castle lavede, og gør vistnok endnu, nogle 1/4 bølge konstrktioner, hvor hornmundingen udgøres af en art basreflex, ned mod gulvet. De konstruktioner har fået en del ros.
Her er noget der minder om et "seriøst" horn:
Carfrae

Well, calling it one better is probably the understatement of the decade. These horns are BIG. No, not as big as the ones above, and since they can be tucked nicely into a corner of your room, they might end up not using much more effective space than a lot of other speakers that require placement at some distance to the walls. But big and expensive they are, and you can see where your money goes. They are beautifully made by a furniture manufacturer, and in spite of my ambiguous relationship with the Lowther drivers, I would definitely not mind spending some time with these speakers. I think I have never heard Lowther drivers play more evenly and still retain the famous Lowther dynamics and immediacy. They also offer something more like REAL bass than most Lowther-based systems can offer, and they certainly leave any poor Acousta in the dust.
Now I wonder whether Carfrae would set me up with a pair for a while, and if they would, if my wife would let them into the living room.
http://www.carfrae.com/pages/home.html