Crawlspace sub without cutting a hole in my floor

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I want to build a new HT subwoofer in the crawlspace of my home, without cutting holes in my floor. Crazy, I know.

The floor joists are 16" apart and the floor itself is 1/2" thick "oriented strand board" (the super cheap glued together composite stuff). There is a half inch of foam on top of that, followed by carpet.

My thought is to build a super stiff sealed enclosure in my crawlspace with a closed chamber that absorbs the back wave, forcing sound to travel through the floor into my living room. Essentially using my floor as the subwoofer.

Is this possible?

Wife factor is a big deal. I have a 2.4 cu ft sealed sub in my living room and she complains about it. Too big, gets in the way, yada yada yada

My living room is open to the dining room and kitchen, leaving a space of 18'x34'x9'. While my Dayton Ref 12" sounds nice, it struggles.

Can this work?

If I do need to cut a vent in the floor (***cringe***), how big?
 
Yeah, the more I think about it, the more I realize I need to make some alterations....

I could probably drill 1/2" holes in the floor without anyone (wife) noticing. Two Dayton Reference 15s right under the couch, 4ft apart, with 6 cu ft sealed behind them could sound good.
 
23/32" OSB has been used for floors in the US for more than a decade. It is interchangeable with plywood.... But 1/2" thickness seems weird indeed.. at 16" joist spacing our floor would flex a LOT I can only imagine.

Anyway... an air return grill really sounds like your best bet to ventilate a subwoofer into the room.

If you're admin that there can't be holes think about attaching bass shakers to the subfloor as they are intended to be use in similar applications. Much easier to transmit vibrations using them than using a standard driver in an isolated box.
 
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