i know i really dont have clue what im doing as this is my first attempt at build a home theater system but working with audio equipment is really starting to become a passion of mine thats why im building a system from scratch so i can get some expiriance working with all the diferent components of a complex system and hopfully learn a little while i build it. its not as if i expect to build a world class system on my first try, i expect to have to re build quite a few times (and want to rebuild) befor its anygood
Take it easy and be patient. There's many things you'll slowly learn you need if you ever want to make a half-decent system. If every build you ever do is based on failure, you'll never have any reference point to success. What do you get from building a piece of trash speaker?
You need to know about speaker measurements. The tools necessary to do them, the understanding necessary to interpret them, and the software necessary to make use of them. These things don't come free. They require time and money.
Do you even have the tools for building a
box? A router, clamps, modeling software?
It's not just a matter of taking a woofer that looks good, and midbass that looks good, and then hoping they work together. You have to make them work together, and the key to it is complex and pricy.
The reason we recommend kits isn't because we don't think you could eventually learn how to make a decent speaker on your own. It's because this will help you as the first step to learn how to make a decent speaker on your own. As a hobby, you're going to have to invest a lot of time and money before you're ready to design your own speaker. Why not learn from someone else's spent time and money in the mean time?
As simple as it seems on paper, it's nearly mind-blowing just how much theory there is to learn about acoustics, electicity and magnetism, and psychoacoustics when it comes to designing a loudspeaker. This stuff is serious business. Most of the reading can be boring too... white papers written by boring electrical engineers with PH.Ds for engineering journals and stuff like that. Many (not all) of these guys probably have no personality, because what they write is very dry and matter-of-fact... trying to cram all this information will just give you headache. It gives me one.
On a side note, do you mind typing a bit more cleanly... like an adult? I hate to be a grammar and spelling nazi but it helps your message become more clear and also prevents you from seeing like an over-eager 14 year old (even if that's what you are, I'm sure you still know how to spell and punctuate... i hate reading run-on sentences).