Hello all,
I am building a boombox, well, I prefer to call it portable sound system actually, and I have a question regarding the woodworking side.
I bought a Lepai TA2020 amplfiler and some cheap second hand speakers thinking that I would put them in a box I would build my self. I bought two sets of speakers and really impressed by these JVC speakers:
JVC UXP55 HI FI System - review, compare prices, buy online
As I said my initial plan was to build a boomblaster box and put them in it. But since I am quite impressed by the sound and not trusting my woodworking skills, I am thinking that I might not get the same sound quality even if I keep the same geometry of the speaker boxes. So I thought maybe I could fix them with a piece of wood on top and bottom and build the electronics in the middle. Do you think this is a good idea acoustically? And what kind of wood I can use? MDF? wood?
Regards,
Ouz.
I am building a boombox, well, I prefer to call it portable sound system actually, and I have a question regarding the woodworking side.
I bought a Lepai TA2020 amplfiler and some cheap second hand speakers thinking that I would put them in a box I would build my self. I bought two sets of speakers and really impressed by these JVC speakers:
JVC UXP55 HI FI System - review, compare prices, buy online
As I said my initial plan was to build a boomblaster box and put them in it. But since I am quite impressed by the sound and not trusting my woodworking skills, I am thinking that I might not get the same sound quality even if I keep the same geometry of the speaker boxes. So I thought maybe I could fix them with a piece of wood on top and bottom and build the electronics in the middle. Do you think this is a good idea acoustically? And what kind of wood I can use? MDF? wood?
Regards,
Ouz.
Sounds like it will work.
Use plywood.
Good luck with it.
Agreed! Good Luck!
MDF is heavy and fragile.
Plywood is light and tough.
Ergo, use ply for speakers that you're moving around a lot, and use plenty of bracing.
Plywood is light and tough.
Ergo, use ply for speakers that you're moving around a lot, and use plenty of bracing.
- Status
- Not open for further replies.