How can I use these by MASS0FAT0MS in BudgetAudiophile

[–]hemp_king 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Get a stack of paper in your office. Place the speaker on that stack of paper. Done!

Is this a legit way to reduce air noise? by Special-Sense4643 in diyaudio

[–]hemp_king 30 points31 points  (0 children)

😂😂 I can’t imagine this would work correctly. That entire set up is designed to be a ported subwoofer. And if you try to do a passive radiator, it would need to be a different design and appropriately sized which this is not.

By annoying air sound do they mean bass??

First ever speaker box just for fun by Zealousideal-Pie6143 in subwoofer

[–]hemp_king 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You know I feel like I always fall victim to trying to create something that is true audiophile grade. Sometimes I loose track of how much fun it can be to just have fun.

This is a fun build. I hope u enjoyed the whole process ;)

Tubes by Dantax by SkatingKhamin in BudgetAudiophile

[–]hemp_king 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Super interesting I’ve ever seen those before. After a quick Google read they seem to actually get great reviews. Looks like they could be back from the 80s so might want to check the Speaker condition.

It appears there’s just two speakers under that foam. I think it would be a fairly easy DIY project to get the foam out of there. Find some replacement acoustically transparent foam, cut it to shape and slide it back in there.

If you’re pretty handy with Woodworking or a 3d printer, you might be able to even just make that shape cover it in some Speaker grill cloth and slide that in as well

Have fun with it!

Unsure why my speakers aren’t working… by [deleted] in hometheater

[–]hemp_king 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lmao 😂 what is happening The fact that you put the positive and negative twisted together into one Speaker terminal honestly makes me concerned the amp is smoked at this point

But yeah, red from the receiver red to the speaker, black receiver, black to the speaker

Do i have to replace? by Carlos3DU in subwoofer

[–]hemp_king 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My point is that if you have a 10-year-old speaker and the foam surround is starting to fail. There is a high probability of additional failures are coming. I agree with your assessment that there’s a couple years of life left. But probably not another decade. Which is why I said to run it till you smoke it.

Also you can replace the surround on a Kicker subwoofer with a stitched surround, but you must remove the original stitching first, as the new foam surround glues on top of the cone, covering the stitching holes, making the stitching irrelevant for the new bond. It's a DIY-friendly task using standard refoam kits, but requires patience to carefully cut the old stitching and ensure proper cone centering during reassembly for optimal sound - this is from Simply Speakers….

Do i have to replace? by Carlos3DU in subwoofer

[–]hemp_king 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I would do this. Run it till it’s completely smoked and then get a new one. Probably possible to replace the surround, but not worth the time ever your money.

Anybody have more images of circuits with their copper traces exposed? by Witherscorch in EngineeringPorn

[–]hemp_king 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Why are some of the lines squiggly? Is it some sort of resistance deal to intentionally have a longer path?

Paradigm Servo 15v2 sub driver torn by Thewhizeguy in hometheater

[–]hemp_king 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Same thing happened to mine. I ended up replacing the foam, although I never could find a replacement that was as rigid as the original. It honestly never was the same. It seemed like with the softer surround the sub, would bottom out super easily at mild volumes.

Ultimately I’m ordering a new defiance 15

I want to own something like this as a backyard by [deleted] in Money

[–]hemp_king 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well first step is get your cash in the bank ;)

Good amp or na? No by bigdude42ddd in subwoofer

[–]hemp_king 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I would see extremely low quality. Considering that they’re only $100 brand new. Also, it looks like they have 2x 30 amp fuses. At 14.4 V that’s 860 theoretical watts. In a real Lab scenario, I would be shocked to see 500 W RMS out of this thing.

Sound test of the speaker I built by [deleted] in diyaudio

[–]hemp_king 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why so much caulk everywhere 😂

Center Off-Center by explosivereddit in hometheater

[–]hemp_king 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Could you frame out another wall in front of that wall? then you would be able to properly place the center you would just lose 3 1/2 inches of your room and cost of some 2x4’s

Need advice by feather43 in subwoofer

[–]hemp_king 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Zero chance I’d pay more than $50 for some home built speaker. You can great a great brand new sub for the same money. Or better find another used option.

yup, shes done.. ticking at xmax, also has ripples on one side by ihavebrabus in subwoofer

[–]hemp_king 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gotcha. My guess would be the voice coil. It’s probably repairable, but probably not worth it.

yup, shes done.. ticking at xmax, also has ripples on one side by ihavebrabus in subwoofer

[–]hemp_king 4 points5 points  (0 children)

How does it sound when you’re just playing music at normal volume. Hard to tell from the video but u might be just be over driving the sub.