had a chance to spend some time with 1 1/8" and 1 1/4" will be going with 1 3/16"
Couldn't be more pleased with what I'm hearing. It's been a long road.
Wrapping up what we've found out. Sort of a summary of my 100's of hours of labor:
all wood has problems as a sound chamber, some more than others. Additionally, they all sound different, have different character. Generally I have found soft woods to not have enough attack and solidity in the sound, hard woods tend to be hard sounding and often strident in some area (s). The middle woods work best, meaning medium density. Limba is surely my favorite.
The geometry of the cup is as much or more important than the wood species. Even less than perfect woods would benefit from being shaped to a harmonious geometry. Getting the length right being most important followed by making the cup as resonant as possible by paring down the thickness of the chamber walls to 1/8" or less for at least the bulk or middle section of the chamber. The ends need to be beefier to house the driver and to accomodate some sort of decorative end detail, but whenever possible, I'd keep it minimal and non-ostentatious to keep the mass to a minimum. The more resonant the cup, the more alive and intimite the sound is, and this translates to more emotional connection with the sound. Say no to grado type 'endcaps'.
The finish matters, thin and non-intrusive is the name of the game. the finish totally changes the sound from raw wood state. It can be ruined or enhanced. The goal is to find a thin finish that doesn't take away raw wood desirable qualities and adds a refinement to the sound. The right finish will make the sound 'finished', less dry and gives more realism and truness to instruments.
Tuning the cup can literally change the entire character of a driver and sound. It is a revelation to hear the variation and range of poor wood with poor cup geometry and poor finish (totally detuned) to a fully tuned cup that is light and resonant and has musical geometry. The average cup being made I suspect falls somewhere in between these two extremes with the occaisonal accident of planets being alligned and a musical cup being made, but through the understanding of cup tuning, the guessing game and chance can be taken out of the equation and a cup can reliably be made to maximize the driver's potential. I have done this successfully so anyone wanting to do the same need only take all the hard work we've done here and carefully apply it and build upon it. With cup tuning, one no longer needs a rabbits foot to hang onto in anticipation if the headphone will sound awesome. It can be predictable.
violin varnish equivalent. It is a thin oil. two coats on the inside with a very quick and light wet sand (after a week cure time) and 2 coats on the outside seems sufficient to me. 1 day wait after first apply, 4 hours thereafter. This is a very easy to apply finish, goes on thin and dries quick. Doesn't require any top coat. 20 sec. light buff with cotton t shirt after a week cure time. Sound stability will also take a week. This is essetially a violin varnish without any additives for color and light reflection enhancements and a quicker dry time
