0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 27462 times.
I'm currently building some standmount speaker boxes (22"h x 9"w x 13.75"d), all panels are 1" MDF, baffle is 1.25" MDF, with full shelf brace half way back and a strut brace from middle of the shelf brace to the middle of the back panel. I will use poly batting for internal damping and wasn't going to use any panel damping as a braced, 1" thick box this size shouldn't need it. However, I have spent so much time trying to make these boxes the best I can that I am reconsidering. I realise most people use vinyl sheeting of various descriptions. However, the thicker the box panel, the thicker and more massive the damping material needs to be to be effective. I haven't tried it but have doubts as to how effective vinyl tiles etc would be. Today, in the local hardware store, I saw 1.5mm (1/16th") thick lead sheets and thought that they may be a good idea, adhered to the inside of the box with contact adhesive (like constrained layer platforms) or silicone. If necessary, I could use a tack in each corner to help support the weight. They would take up very little box volume, be extremely massive, and I presume would damp any box resonance better than anything else.Anyone tried this? Worthwhile? Any better alternatives?Thanks for any advice you can give.
I think you would need to use full-spread contact adhesive to lock the lead to the MDF (for a CLD approach) and so you need to have done this before you glued the panels together to make the box! It's no good just adhering the lead to the MDF at several points. So don't stress about it!!
I am going to line the inside of my next cabinets with Ice and Water shield. This stuff is like an adhesive backed sheet of tar that sticks to nearly anything. It's avaliable at most hardware stores or lumber yards.
If it's damping mass at key points that you're aiming for, you could try screwing a few large lumps of lead on strategically where they do the most good.
In relation to the polybatting ... have you considered wool? I've read various reports suggesting that it is superior to poly and we happen to have quite a large supply of the best stuff right here in OZ ... www.melandapark.com/ ... at about $10 a kilo.
Not sure that I follow your logic on the attachment system Darren. If the point of lead is to damp vibration at the point where it would be at its max. then sheets are probably an inefficient way to achieve that end. If there's a problem with screwing things to a cabinet then surely we're pretty stuffed as far as the drivers go? With a lump of lead it should be pretty easy to screw and glue to the extent that the connection would be as near to "oneness" as the rest of the box construction.
I used about 1 kg for a total volume of 2 cubic feet.
Daryl, do you have some figures on the relative qualities of wool etc etc? Could you also expand on your point about volume? As I understand it, the volume of damping material is so insignificantly small that it doesn't count and surely the difference between the vol. of wool and that of fibreglass is going to be even more insignificanter.
Fiberglass and acoustic foam are so effective that if you use 100% fiberglass fill or 50% acoustic foam fill enclosure shape is ilrrelavant even cubes with all three dimensions will not exhibit standing waves.The driver/enclosure in the measurements in the LDCB have a resonant frequency around 80hz so the lowest frequency on the provided charts (20hz) is well into the region where cabinet and suspension compliance are in control of SPL.If you look at 20hz on all of the charts in the series you can see that 1lb/ft^3 fiberglass and 50% acoustic foam show and increase of about 3db which far better than the others.
Hi Darren,I have 2 sheets of 'no rez' left over from my speaker project if your interested in purchasing them whichshould be enough to line your speakers.RegardsRod
I was interested to come across this in an online review of a Focus Audio speaker ........ but found that these deadened the box so much that the resulting sound was sterile.[/glow] Instead, he preferred to keep the cabinet just slightly resonant, which, he believes, helps retain the emotion and expressiveness that have become Focus Audio hallmarks...I don't know whether this means that we (or they) like box induced distortion/colouration, or that speaker drivers are designed (or at least auditioned) in boxes and therefore removing the box colouration too much changes what the designers heard and intended for us to hear ????