Hi,
I have designed a few subwoofers in the past, but never actually made one.
A couple of days ago, I was looking at Sensurround on the internet that rumbled the cinema in the film 'Earthquake' and I actually found the circuit diagram for the rumble generator. Its not actually that complex and I should be able to build it.
However the next day at school (actually 6th form but located at an Upper School) when I was talking to my Physics teacher about finding it and how good it would be to be able to actually 'rumble the room, he suggested I could make a smaller, less powerful version of it that could rumble a table as we will be doing about Earthquakes somewhen next year and it would be a good demonstration, I began to think about how I could build a sub to do that.
I have been looking at drivers, but I have not been able to find a cheap(i.e under £100) driver with a frequency range that extends to 17Hz. From previous research I know that a ported enclosure would be the best way to achieve that sort of frequency and I have read up on the design of ported enclosures.
To power this, I am going to make several cheap IC amps and bridge them. How many amps can you safely bridge together as I estimate about 600 to 800W should be sufficient as the sensurround version used a 1500W amplifier.
This idea may seem stupid and a prehaps too complex but I am willing to have a go at doing it as on the plus side it will also give me a sub afterwards to go in my HT
Any suggestions on drivers that I could use and an internal volume?