
panteragstk
Audioholic Warlord
Looks good.
Thanks, only about half done. I still have to get the outer front baffle on, fill some edges, oil it, and poly it. Ugh.Egaglooking great. I'll take you on your offer one day, thanks. You should make a video.
Soooooooooooooooooooooooo how does that monster sound?
The trim came out much better on the subwoofer than on the speakers. Still not perfect, but I'm definitely getting better at it.Very pro like dang. I HATE YOU!![]()
I'm happy to hear that you're getting better with trim...The trim came out much better on the subwoofer than on the speakers. Still not perfect, but I'm definitely getting better at it.
Well, I don't know if I would go that farIt looks nice. Why did you use trim instead of a roundover router bit? Just curious. I haven't done either so I don't want to come across as telling you how to build things. You clearly know what you're doing.![]()
Thanks, should look pretty good when it's done and gem better when I get around to building a second.looks like a nice match!
4 lonely looking tweets there though![]()
The dark part on the hardwood nosing had me fooled. At first I thought it was an inlay. Do you not have an electric miter box? Sealer/varnish penetrates end grain more deeply leaving it a darker color. If you are staining wood a darker color you can apply natural (clear) sealer to the end grain to prevent this darkening and it might help even with clear poly. Not sure on that though.
I do not. I wish I did, but I don't have the room to set it up or store it. Hopefully I'll be able to clear out my parents garage and make the move in there, or better yet find a job and move out. I tried mitering the hardwood on the bookshelves with the table saw and the provided miter gauge and got mixed results. I think it would have come out better if I had the Incra miter gauge, but I was well past making cuts by the time I acquired that. After I make some adjustments to the Incra, I'll have to try mitering with it to see what it looks like. I expect it to be much more precise.The dark part on the hardwood nosing had me fooled. At first I thought it was an inlay. Do you not have an electric miter box? Sealer/varnish penetrates end grain more deeply leaving it a darker color. If you are staining wood a darker color you can apply natural (clear) sealer to the end grain to prevent this darkening and it might help even with clear poly. Not sure on that though.
The mitered panels didn't come out perfectly, but not bad for a first attempt. A better blade, slower feed rate, and a better clamping procedure would have helped. The other thing that would have made the seams look better is if veneer was going over top. With veneer and fixing the issues already mentioned I think the mitered edges would look pretty darn good. I can't wait to start getting the lumber in for the next project. Although I'm definitely cheating because the wood is just too expensive to have me bungle it up.Normal tool progression gets you a table saw after the miter box but I guess this is how speaker builders do it. Your projects look good ... especially for a mathematician. No other way to put it. The mitered panels on this build are certainly no cake walk. I don't think I've seen anybody pull that off. I've thought about it a time or two but the difficulty factor has always put me off. Well, that and the fact I'm a one trick pony in speaker building terms.
I reconfigured the main system and managed to liberate the AB International 800.2. This way it has more than enough power and there is a spare channel for adding another later on. The box is 13" X 13" X 11.5" external with 1.5" front baffle and 3/4" everywhere else.So you have a DSP to EQ that thing and you power it up with what? What are the dimensions on the box? One or two of those with ... well, what I'd really like is a couple of sealed JL 8W7s with Bash amps. Too bad money didn't grow like weird insect hordes in Adam's bathroom.![]()