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#1
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How much fiberglass = MDF
I am thinking of building a box in my spare tire well. I don't have
much depth, so I need all that I have.I have 2 Punch 10" woofers. I was thinking of building the bottom of the box from fiberglass. That would give me plenty of depth for the speakers, maybe even enought to angle the speakers a bit for looks. If I had to use MDF I could fit 1/2" but I doubt I could use the 3/4" that is reccommended for 10's or bigger. Can anyone tell me how many layers of fiberglass I would need? Also, Is wooven matt better (more dense) than the chop matt type of fiberglass? Thanks, Jason |
#2
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jw007 wrote
I am thinking of building a box in my spare tire well. I don't have much depth, so I need all that I have.I have 2 Punch 10" woofers. I was thinking of building the bottom of the box from fiberglass. That would give me plenty of depth for the speakers, maybe even enought to angle the speakers a bit for looks. If I had to use MDF I could fit 1/2" but I doubt I could use the 3/4" that is reccommended for 10's or bigger. Can anyone tell me how many layers of fiberglass I would need? Also, Is wooven matt better (more dense) than the chop matt type of fiberglass? Thanks, Jason You could just dynamat the well and bolt the front (top) baffle of 3/4 MDF to the trunk with a bead of silicone. That would maximize the airspace. I suppose if you didn't want to bolt through the floor of the trunk you could glass the baffle right to the metal. Woven mat is more flexible. Dan |
#3
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"SF" wrote in message nk.net... That will work ONLY if you get the entire wheel well sealed, with no air leaks at all. Any air leaks will eventually destroy your sub. um, no. it won't. |
#4
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"Warren Bryant" wrote in message ... How would it 'destroy' the driver? I assume he didn't literally mean it would destroy the sub, I assume he meant it would destroy its performance. The only possibility for real damage I suppose would be due to excursion control by the damping factor of a sealed enclosure, but I doubt it would matter. Anyway, I'd drop the fiberglass idea if it were me. They use MDF for a reason. I'd take the hit on the small amount of enclosure space you'd lose if you are truly maxed out for space down to the quarter inch. I doubt it would matter much. |
#5
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SF wrote
That will work ONLY if you get the entire wheel well sealed, with no air leaks at all. Any air leaks will eventually destroy your sub. A fiberglass bottom would be better. I'm sorry, and where will the air leaks come from? The wheel well is stamped from a single sheet of metal. My point is that the 3/16 " thickness of the well is MORE then sufficiently stiff (especially given the molded contours) to constitute an enclosure. Certainly much stronger then fiberglass or MDF. Dynamat it to kill vibrations and you're golden. Dan |
#6
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"jw007" wrote in message news 3/8" of fiberglass seems REALLY thick. Thats about thick as a small boat hull. How could these guys get those nice looking rounded boxes with such a thick layer of glass. I was thinking 4 layers of matt ? Jason Not for the entire enclosure, just the mounting flange for the sub(s). 4 layers of glass would suffice for the enclosure walls, possibly less if there are stiffening ridges included. |
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