maverick...i was thinking along those lines actually and i began to experiment with that notion.
i found the following:
- isolating the sound at its source may require some sort of external sound absorptive covering or alternately a shell which has a layer of insulation so that it does not escape through source.
- any piping used will require that its material reflect sound rather than either absorbing it or vibrating with it. energy loss....actually, this would be even better than absorbtive material...much less loss.
- that i need to find out whether or not sound waves (like light) can be condensed and focused without losing its clarity and becoming muffled. (like my neighbors car bass that makes me want to pull my hair out_still love the idea of turning this thing on them once ... kidding of course...LOL) i am assuming that it can be, but that it must be done by reflection (like a parabolic dish with equal distances between all points center.
tonight i used a length of shop vac piping and a small standard computer speaker (bare speaker wired to input) and found that the device let out lots and lots of sound down its length. there ended up being only a slight difference between the sound directly in front of it and from the side.
i then began wrapping towels around it trying to muffle the sound from escaping from anywhere but the end. it worked a little, but so far unsatisfactory.
it seems that in order to be effective i have to begin to associate sound with its parabala and consider both its direction as well as its frequency or wave.
am i correct with this assumption or have i missed the way that sound travels entirely?
i've worked with light alot....sound is something new...at least anything near this level of specificity.
it also occured to me that i could essentially reverse engineer a dish microphone, but that it may be difficult to focus with any real degree of clarity.
anyone think that could work or would the wave expand once it left the dish?
i'd like to get the sound down to lets say a 10 ft area on a vertical grid 100 ft away.