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DIY & Tutorials
DIY For Audio
A couple of questions for the experts, AV cabinet build
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<blockquote data-quote="Timber_MG" data-source="post: 959983" data-attributes="member: 18"><p>By slot loading I meant that the woofer not be visible from the front.</p><p></p><p>If vibration is a concern, the majority of transmitted vibration in a braced enclosure comes from newtonian forces (the cabinet moving opposite and in amplitude by the ratio of moving cone+air mass / moved mass (cabinet)). I would suggest a foam insert to slip the rear speaker cabinet into a normal cabinetry thickness and perhaps have the baffle a bit oversize to flush up with the gap you're building for it. You can use an automotive grade (Car system/3M) double sided tape to secure the baffle to the say 16mm cabinet front, which would make any tweaking much simpler. These kinds of tapes are usually cut out and scraped off should the need arise.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Timber_MG, post: 959983, member: 18"] By slot loading I meant that the woofer not be visible from the front. If vibration is a concern, the majority of transmitted vibration in a braced enclosure comes from newtonian forces (the cabinet moving opposite and in amplitude by the ratio of moving cone+air mass / moved mass (cabinet)). I would suggest a foam insert to slip the rear speaker cabinet into a normal cabinetry thickness and perhaps have the baffle a bit oversize to flush up with the gap you're building for it. You can use an automotive grade (Car system/3M) double sided tape to secure the baffle to the say 16mm cabinet front, which would make any tweaking much simpler. These kinds of tapes are usually cut out and scraped off should the need arise. [/QUOTE]
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DIY & Tutorials
DIY For Audio
A couple of questions for the experts, AV cabinet build
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