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Bike Stereo

Bike Stereo
Build a sound system for your bicycle and entertain your friends. The speakers are designed to fit within the frame and can be easily removed. My system is powered by a battery operated mobile T-amp and an ipod. The total cost of the system is well under $100 and can be completed in a few hours.
 
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Step 1Required Tools

Required Tools
Here are some of the things you will need to get started.
1. A good pair of tin snips.
2. Velcro Tape.
3. Pliers
4. Wrench
5. Sharpie
6. Spray Paint (optional)

NOT PICTURED but still important:
7. Speaker wire
8. 1/8" line to go from the source to the amp. (mono is probably better than stereo since the speakers face opposite directions)
9. A sturdy basket. I got mine at IKEA in the bathroom section for 4 bucks.
10. A drill and a bit that will go through aluminum duct.
11. An old leather belt.
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70 comments
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Oct 17, 2011. 9:19 PMggardner7 says:
you could put a pic of apple on it in memory of Steve Jobs
Jul 29, 2008. 11:12 PMNT86 says:
excellent design. for more bass i would suggest a rear rack and a small wooden or plastic cabinet with more standard size speakers, such as those in boom boxes. once again i thought the aluminum was pretty cool how it hides the speakers.
Sep 27, 2011. 2:05 PM_Scratch_ says:
Or might I suggest a bass shaker for ~40$ with its own circle of aluminum on a rear rack. I would assume it would work as a sub, albeit a lower quality one.
Sep 27, 2011. 4:41 PMNT86 says:
That would be cool, aluminum might resonate and sound hollow or tinny though. For mine I ended up taking an altec lansing system from a computer putting the desk speakers and controls in the sub box with the sub and mounted that to a rack and hooked up a 12 volt battery. Works nicely with a little bit of rattle from the low quality sub but overall a good hit at the beach
Jul 16, 2011. 6:17 PM64bitgenius says:
i thought this would be a more speaker, less bike idea...i kinda like the idea of riding a speaker.
Mar 24, 2011. 4:04 PMdermbrian says:
I have a couple of T-Amps, and a pair of the original Sonic Impact fold-open 'cardboard speakers' that have those Sonic Impact transducers inside of them.

I may play around with those and make a speaker system like yours. Instead of aluminum, I'd likely try that weather-resistant material that real estate signs are made of. Kind of a plasticized or plastic cardboard. That should reduce the weight substantially, and it may be a better medium for the transducers. The Sonic Impact cardboard speakers are something similar to that stuff. I'd use hollow posts at the corners as spacers between the panels.

One thing I like about your design is that it lends itself to decoration. The chalkboard paint suggestion was good, but that's good real estate for bumper stickers or any kind of 'statement'. eg: Google 'Peak Oil' People!

Of course, I'd use a suet feeder for my electronics basket, a la my own bicycle stereo design here....
http://www.instructables.com/id/Bicycle-stereo-dashboard/
Mar 24, 2011. 7:09 PMdermbrian says:
Shoot. Forgot about my two water bottles in that area that make this an unlikely mod to my bike. I guess I'll stick to powered speakers.
May 29, 2010. 5:42 PMCydeSwype says:
 Amazon has Dayton ones for $16 a pair and some other brand for only $6 a pair!  Not sure if they are of a poorer quality but they seem highly rated.  Think the $6 may be a temporary sale.
Aug 8, 2009. 6:48 PMsharlston says:
cool ible im getting a bmx in a couple of days! :)
Dec 17, 2009. 12:38 PMzeroemission says:
if anyone is looking for a forum dedicated to bicycle stereos, stop by the bikeology website's forum. the owner of the site has built some pretty ambitious & LOUD trailer systems, but we'd like ANYONE with any kind of bike system or even just interested in them to visit.

as many different systems as people have built, it would be nice to have a community that shares info & ideas as well as a common place for everyone to show their rides off & just hang out.
Jul 24, 2009. 12:38 AMYerboogieman says:
When you feel the need, change the price of the T-amp, and add it to my Group.
Jun 16, 2009. 1:02 PMtannerr52 says:
Nice 'ible! I liked how the basket is JUST big enough for your amp and ipod. I think you could be able to make the aluminum panels smaller, there is a lot of extra room in there.
Oct 1, 2008. 8:59 PMYerboogieman says:
i just put something a little like this together, but instead of eight batteries my amp takes four and runs for about the same time.
Sep 19, 2008. 10:00 AMhotcharlie says:
Good lookin', man! I don't know how I missed this Instructable, but...
Check out my '68 Collegiate:
Right Here
Where'd you get the whitewalls?
Aug 10, 2008. 7:53 AMtroyka says:
Nice work... I would use the space on the panel to advertise my youth club or website, or maybe paint it with chalk board paint... I got a marshal 9v mini practice amp from ebay (£15) and plugged my Men sleek into that for maple music.. only mono though..
Jul 29, 2008. 11:14 PMNT86 says:
how many ohms?
Jul 29, 2008. 9:29 PMScotlandman27 says:
hey do you know if the soundpads would work through .1 inches thick acrylic/plexiglass? because that's what i wanted to use. i dont want to order the stuff and then have to use a new frame...
Jul 13, 2008. 8:41 AMScotlandman27 says:
now how did you manage to get your hands on a Sonic Impact Portable T-Amp Digital Audio Amplifier for 30 dollars new? i can only find it for 115-160 bucks, new or not.
Jul 7, 2008. 9:30 PMconrad2468 says:
great "officer someone just stole my bike stereo" "what are you smoking?!"
Jun 30, 2008. 7:52 PMcaca1822 says:
i love this instructable. ive been wanting to do this, one problem.. im not sure if this will work on a girls bike. ill have to see if the speakers fit.
May 20, 2008. 1:16 PMsomeguy1234 says:
cant beleive u trashed ur racer to build that......
May 21, 2008. 11:38 AMsomeguy1234 says:
thank the god of bicycles!
May 21, 2008. 9:27 AMThe Insomniac says:
Sweet instructable. I had been considering building one of these for a while, but had never gotten started/had no clue where to begin. When i finally get around to maknig this, I will be sure to credit it you +1 comment.
May 14, 2008. 3:38 PMYerboogieman says:
i want a T-amp like that but cant find the old ones, just the new $80 ones, way too expensive, and dont want to try ebay
Apr 25, 2008. 10:26 AMgreatscotmagic says:
This is an Instructable on building a solar powered boom box. The project uses a Sonic Impact amp and indoor outdoor speakers.

You could build it and just put that into the basket.

Here is the link"
http://www.instructables.com/id/DIY-Solar-Boombox/
Apr 23, 2008. 10:36 AMheyzuphowsitgoin says:
haha thats pretty fancy... i just took a guitar amp apart and took the speaker, duct-taped it to the bike, and duct-taped and old mp3 player to the handle bars and connected them with a speaker wire... it was pretty loud too!
Mar 10, 2008. 2:45 PMzeroemission says:
don't forget doubling speakers too. every time you double the number of speakers you're using, you get 3 free decibles which is the same as doubling your amplifier power. it probably wouldn't work the same if you doubled the number of panel drivers though as you wouldn't be doubling surface area too. as to "other speakers", what do you mean? clayfig, other panel drivers, or speakers in general? generally any speaker would work with a sonic impact unless it's some crazy 2 ohm or 16 ohm unit. actually 16 ohms would work, but it would seriously cut the amps output. are you looking for specs for the sonic impact drivers?
Mar 25, 2008. 1:16 AMI smell bacon says:
i made a similar thig with a razor scooter, it was cool :)
Oct 10, 2007. 7:56 AMClayfig says:
Hey I want to create a speaker back pack using the same materials but with different speakers does anyone know the specifications of the speakers that I can use with the amp?
Mar 10, 2008. 11:10 AMPhoghat says:
You can use 4 or 8 ohm speakers (try to get High Efficiency if you can) with 8 Ohm it's ~ 6 watts/channel and 4 ohm gives you ~ 15 w/channel
Mar 8, 2008. 4:14 PMzeroemission says:
a few things that might be robbing efficiency and sound quality are material mass and a stiff suspension as mentioned, but your driver size would be limiting also. you might consider using large sheets of synthetic cardboard with some sort of suspension as jaime said. the material is stiff yet extremely light which might help you get better sound and deeper bass with a larger surface area. as light as the material is, you could make some sort of temporary mounts using a luggage rack behind your seat. then you could install them when you want them or pull them when you don't. one other issue could be backwave cancellations. an unenclosed driver's soundwaves cancel each other out especially in the bass. even if you're running two drivers in opposite phase, each of their backwaves might be dampening the motion of the opposing driver somewhat. i'll have to get back to everyone as to just how loud and deep those pyle speakers go when i get those next. i think that's probably the cheapest, lightest and loudest bike setup you can get using sonic impact amps.
Dec 3, 2007. 3:03 PMaskvictor says:
I think the speakers would work better attached to a stiffer material. Wood is probably the cheapest and easiest (though heavy);
Mar 6, 2008. 3:52 PMjaime9999 says:
MATERIAL-- Wood is terrible. Have you ever seen a speaker cone made of wood? Too heavy, and absorbs vibration. The material choice has already been made by 100 years of speaker design-- you want the stiffest, yet lightest material. Speakers generally use paper rolled into a cone which is quite stiff when suspended properly. You want the entire cone/diaphragm/board vibrating in unison to the music signal, so that the air pressure waves generated are uniform and match the music signal exactly, without additional (non-music signal) vibrations or resonances created. Some speakers use thin metal boards like this. Electrostatic speakers use a thin polyester membrane film hung in space. Some hi-tech speakers use a flat diaphragm made out of flat honeycomb of aluminum foil material, which is very stiff and lightweight; similar to what you've done here. Another very stiff yet lighweight material is foamcore. But I believe the authors choice of sheet metal aluminum is probably the best in this application. SUSPENSION-- Note that an ordinary speaker suspends its cone in space with a flexible gasket-like construction at the outer ring and also at the apex of the cone. The trick is how to suspend a maximally rigid diaphragm/cone/board in space whilst not impeding its movement (vibration) induced by the driver. This design holds the sheet metal at 3 corners, leaving the sheet no other option but to flex (distort) to accomodate the vibration induced by the driver, which causes the resulting distorted vibration (sound). Fancy hifi speakers use varieties of foam, rubbers, fabric, and elastomer materials for their suspension components; if you could get a stiffer diaphragm/cone/board material and suspend it with such a materials, you might get better quality. Or, just configure the suspension system to be as flexible as possible-- instead of leather and velcro, perhaps rubber inner-tube material, hung vertically (want no tension horizontally). Of course, the Sound Pad drivers are a big source of bad sound-- they work not by vibrating a diaphragm/cone/board suspended in space as ordinary speakers do, but rather by vibrating the thing they're attached to (a wall, or this sheet metal) with respect to their own mass. You could make them work better by gluing a heavy mass to their backside to give them more mass to push against (sort of like how you can hammer a nail on a board in the air only if you hold a heavy rock or brick behind the board). Are you sure the two Sound Pads in here aren't touching each other, and aren't touching the opposite diaphragm?
Feb 28, 2008. 5:21 PMzeroemission says:
It's too bad that I don't think you can get the $30 Sonic Impacts anymore. They've been replaced by $50 units that include A/C powering, but they look cooler with their blue illuminated volume controls.

For anyone interested in an easy "plug & play" system, check my webpage out atmy street party bicycle

It uses off the shelf gear. CD player, Sonic Impact amp, saddle bags, & a pair of Mission M71s I had laying around. It sounds pretty loud as long as I'm not outside a nightclub.

I'm going to upgrade with more lighter & more efficient Pyle outdoor speakers and a Blaupunkt 85wpc class D car amp driven by a motorcycle battery over the crank.

The current system is too top heavy and can't do bass with much authority at volume.
Jan 8, 2008. 10:48 PMwishes says:
hmm i had the idea to do this, but yours sure seems like a long and involved process lol. I was just gonna grab some logitech mm50 rechargeable ipod dock speakers and mount them under the handlebars then cover them in neoprene for water protection. How does yours sound? decent clarity and bass ? Also, does the wind catch you side on at all ? or do you only do beach front and park style (sunny day, slow speed) stuff?
Jan 21, 2008. 8:17 PMjplkeekif says:
The tube sounds like a really good idea, reminds me of the bazooka enclosures for subwoofers, it should also make it easier to clean up the wiring and depending on the type/size of the amp you use you might even be able to conceal that as well.
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