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dbane883

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Everything posted by dbane883

  1. It's 6000lb concrete. For 1" thickness for these dimensions, its more than plenty with the aggregate I used. Polyfibres are useful if the spans are greater than say 18" at 1" thick. The enclosures are not load bearing anyways like a countertop might be
  2. Madness
  3. Aside from watches, my other hobbies include working with various concrete mixtures to make countertops, furniture, etc as well as hifi audio. So last summer I embarked on a project that combined both of these interests and built prototype speakers with enclosures made entirely out of concrete. The problem with many traditional speaker cabinets made out of wood/mdf is "resonance". Could be good if controlled,, could be terrible if its not. Eliminating resonance is one way to get a purer sound from the drivers. I decided on a closed cabinet design using an economical tweeter/driver set from Dayton Audio. The excercise was more to see if a completely closed design could be built. The crossovers would have to fit through the woofer hole. Here is the final product: I started by drafting the cabinet form on paper, and cut out pieces of acrylic/plywood for the drivers: The form itself was made out of melamine, which is slick enough that once the concrete is set, it's easily removed: Because the final product has to be hollow, i created the hollow forms using syrofoam: I also embedded aluminum rods beside the driver knockouts. These will later be used as to secure the screws for the drivers themselves: Driver knockouts in place: Followed by the styrofoam (the rods will create the channel for the binding posts): The pour was a near disaster. Apparently securing the styrofoam with two sided tape was not ideal, since styrofoam floats!!.. I had to litterally push it down while i as pouring the concrete until it was semi-set: Once the forms are released, it's not a pretty sight: Slowly chipping away at the styrofoam interior: Test fitting the drivers..perfect: Drilled the screw holes into the aforementioned aluminum rods: http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o309/darthbane883/Concrete%20Speakers/IMG_0157_zpsbe94834b.jpg Now the grinding/polishing: After several hours of wet polishing using diamond resin pads: Tapping and final assembly: Prototypes complete: Despite a few hiccups along the way, overall, I think the process was a success. The speakers sound incredible and on par with speakers that cost $3k-5k easily. While the process might seem a bit crude, you gotta remember, I didn't have a guide to work with. I've never really seen this done before and there is definitely room for improvement. But this was just a prototype which I'm currently using in my home office. My project this summer will be to build the ultimate home monitors using some high end Danish Scan Speak tweeters/woofers using custom-made cross overs. I think i will be using a ported design this time. Stay tuned.
  4. ok.. just checking... congrats on fixing it. Better than a 2+ month wait for a very simple fix.
  5. Did you place the friction washer above or below the click spring?
  6. Suspects
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  13. Georgia
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