Help the Ijit: 99% wood-free sub ?

Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
The wood-free* subwoofer enclosure: has anyone built a successful box for a “big” sub, 12, 15” or larger?

Contest rules:

Box should be “mostly” wood free (wood = ply, hardwood, MDF, etc.)

*A little bit of wood is allowed! You are permitted to make the baffle(s) that the driver(s) mount on because of the need for holding up the weight. Using wood blocks to hold screws, for glue joints, for bracing, etc. is allowed. You are allowed a very thin layer of veneer on the outside for appearance. Aw what the heck, ok we will allow very thin (1/8" or less) wood layers, multiple if you like.



The closest thread I've found re subwoofers was this:


http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/subwoofers/258433-light-air-slot-loaded-band-pass-sub.html


Using foam core, apparently these guys made decent smaller subs with smaller (8" or less) drivers.



Apparently even our resident genius xrk971 has never attempted anything so audacious. Even the intrepid Patrick Bateman has not been heard from; he was last seen under the front dash trying to install a Paraline version of a Klipschorn :rolleyes:

Cost of material should be equal to or less than normal sub enclosure material, let’s say $30/sheet for birch plywood which is probably wildly optimistic.

High-tech eschewed. Note that you may use a PC for planning and design. But my goal is a simple box. Even I could design that :D Expensive exotic materials not allowed. Sorry no carbon fiber, even if it was scrap you stole, er, scavenged from work :blush: This most likely disqualifies retail composite boards but quotes being accepted. Hardee board?

Similarly, the materials and box must be within reach of the typical hobbyist. This means nothing more advanced than normal wood shop tools. Sorry boys and girls, but you can’t use a 3-D printer, automated cutting and finishing, or the industrial laser that almost gives James Bond a vasectomy in “Goldfinger.”

Mass: usually people build with not-wood for weight saving; this is ok but not required for this contest. While I want a speaker for indoor use so I could give a rip about weight, the box should be heavy enough that it won’t blow away in a light breeze.

Strength of box: it is not required to be as strong as touring gear; those need to allow the possibility of a 300-LB drunken fan standing on top of the cabs, as well as the inevitable handing abuse by the orangutangs (sorry, “Roadies”) nightly.

Acceptable performance: enclosure ideally is at least as sound-dead as a MDF box; at minimum, no hums, buzzes, etc. during a sine sweep at high dB.

Main design goals: lower cost of materials; equal or better performance (sound proofing) than default woods; ease of assembly.


What I am going to try: I've recently graduated to "horns," or those who have the poor luck to be aware of my endeavors, half-assed copies of Danley Unity waveguides. Next step is to scrap the Frankenclosure (my 2014 sub build), and use the Alpine SWS-15D4 in a "normal" (sealed box) for the 0-100 Hz-ish range. Thus the request for proposal for cheap materials.



Alpine


This is the on-hand driver I'll try. Specs say it only needs 2 cu. feet for a sealed box; bigger is ok. The enclosure only has to be strong enough to not collapse with the weight of the driver or the horn on top (which probably weights less than the subwoofer!)
 

Attachments

  • goldfinger-laser.jpg
    goldfinger-laser.jpg
    159.1 KB · Views: 298
A brick enclosure would meet all of your stated requirements. It certainly wouldn't blow away in a light breeze.

If it had to be portable, I'd suggest re-purposing an existing container, like the pictured wheelie bin.

Put a sack of rice in it to give it some stability, and another on top to keep the lid from rattling. Hard to beat that for ease of assembly :)
 

Attachments

  • bin.png
    bin.png
    215.4 KB · Views: 290
A plastic 15 gallon drum/barrel many times seen on craigslist for sale for under $20. I have several that were given to me free by a dairy farmer who had stacks of empties. Diameter is plenty for a 12" driver and by adding a thin baffle to the top could easily fit a 15" or 18" driver. Those drums exceed 2.0 cubic foot volume slightly, but add a layer of concrete to the bottom and Bob's your uncle.
 
Actually Bob's my cousin. And if my aunt had a ---- she'd be my uncle :D

I've heard tell of the Redneck Sub, which is similar to the above suggestion except a 5-gallon paint bucket is used. I am still working towards a normal-appearing rectangular or cubical box that will sit on the floor and have a 24x24" waveguide on top (same unit, or two units, I'm still deciding...)
 
*A little bit of wood is allowed! You are permitted to make the baffle(s) that the driver(s) mount on because of the need for holding up the weight. Using wood blocks to hold screws, for glue joints, for bracing, etc. is allowed.
This is wrong, the opposite is right, which consists in mounting the driver very tight with the baffle, i.e. coupling mechanically ( and, as I know, the wood de-couples....)and this can be done using the same material as the chassis/basket . Threaded rods & C. can be part of the baffle itself, when you have the ability to cut a metal baffle it should be easy :cool:
 
12321596_10209113065809643_4157462773982502846_n.jpg

10" driver mounted in an old rubber bumper from the port next to the workshop with 1" steel pipe for feet. Pretty much bang on 2cu internal volume. Driver screwed straight into the rubber with 3" wood screws. The entire thing stands upside down, has a thin ply top that contains speaker terminal and the ports.

Met everything aside from the weight saving...it's easily over 100kg.
 
Invert 1 of the drivers for push-pull so you reduce even order distortion (up to 30dB reduction of 2nd order and it works better with cheaper drivers). You could couple the drivers tightly with bolts and threaded rods in order to better reduce cabinet vibration (might not be necessary with the self-damping of the XPS)

If you can splurge for an extra driver and have the space available opposed mounting (whether on the sides or in a slot) is wonderful. My 400 liter dual 15" PPSL monster sub vibrates a lot less when pumping 110dB then my small 35 liter single 10" doing 95dB.
 
If you want cheap with good performance and don't care about weight I think poured concrete of some sort would probably be a good solution. Maybe pour each half separately and then glue them together? You could likely borrow some techniques used for concrete countertops if you wanted to make it look nice.

Fiberglass used to be used fairly extensively in car audio. Not sure it would be meet the cost criteria, but if it were used as a component of some type of hybrid system (like fiberglass mat over a wire grid or other framework) might get something workable.

How about the heavy cardboard tubes used as forms for concrete piers? Looks like a 12"x48" from Lowes is <$10... just cut to length and figure out a couple baffles for the ends. Bigger diameters are probably thicker/stronger cardboard.
 
Large diameter industrial PVC pipe. For sewage systems it is available in -roughly- 8inch /20cm 10inch/25cm diameter with wall thickness of some 0.7 inch.

Little MDF or Plywood is needed to mount the woofer, or woofers if top and bottom are used. Bottom and top disks can be held together with threaded steel rods (ca. 0.3 Inch/8mm), with nuts screwed on.

Very simple: has been done for ages.

Good luck,

Eelco
 
Founder of XSA-Labs
Joined 2012
Paid Member
Invert 1 of the drivers for push-pull so you reduce even order distortion (up to 30dB reduction of 2nd order and it works better with cheaper drivers). You could couple the drivers tightly with bolts and threaded rods in order to better reduce cabinet vibration (might not be necessary with the self-damping of the XPS)

If you can splurge for an extra driver and have the space available opposed mounting (whether on the sides or in a slot) is wonderful. My 400 liter dual 15" PPSL monster sub vibrates a lot less when pumping 110dB then my small 35 liter single 10" doing 95dB.

That was the plan to have one flipped with magnet out but I miscalculated the clearance required to slip the driver in with the bezel of the other one sticking out. Off by maybe 5mm. :)

The bolts to hold them mechanically rigid is a great idea - it would really make it quieter as the opposed motion is already vibration cancelling.
 
Well Bill,

A long time ago (mid seventies) Wireless World featured an article in which KEF B139 s were indeed placed in a -albeit unused- toilet. The whole contraption was supposed to function as a horn-like system. I vaguely recall a certain Dinsdale wrote the article.

So once again, there is nothing new under the sun.

Eelco
 
Nobody's come up with the obvious - Cardboard tubes for making concrete pillars?
Granted, they're very much like MDF, so maybe they're a bit to close to illegal?

They're only 4mm thick, though, and can be used as a foundation for fibreglass.

Fiberglass can also be used. Make a foam shape, add a wood frame for the driver, and add multiple layers of fiberglass. Dig out the foam afterwards. The car stereo guys have been doing this for years.

Johan-Kr
 

Attachments

  • image.jpg
    image.jpg
    29.4 KB · Views: 111
Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.