Make a set of floor standing speakers with it!
Skill level
Intermediate - advanced woodworking
Materials
Scrap hardwood
Speaker components.
Assorted wood screws - #6 or #8
Paint (optional)
Packaging foam
Wood glue
Liquid nails
Tools
Drill & bits
Router/jisaw
Tablesaw
Remove these ads by
Signing UpStep 1: Layout materials
Match wood grains if possible.
Stagger the pieces to give the joints more strength.




















































Visit Our Store »
Go Pro Today »




Your design here is elegant as well as functional, but you're not immediately showing the 1/2 to 1/4 rule in your step down (or the basic 'angular' thought) behind the Trans Line construction. Your measurements seem to follow the guidelines, but I was always led to believe the construction was to be at some kind of angle.
Hey, that's what thinking 'out of the box' is all about right?
I wouldn't worry at all about the hardwood being resonant in this design, note that both front & back walls are MDF, and note that the T-line parts will VERY securely brace the hardwood sides.
Excellent 'ible providing MUCH food for thought, thank you very much hells-oui.
With an open attic as your box, you have what is called an infinite baffle, and must use a really stiff woofer.
I realize, our friend Hells-oui is showing how to build a very good looking box with ingenious quickie folded horn, not leading a class in speaker design.
I would be afraid that solid wood would make it a resonance box giving it a "boxy" sound. I have always strived to get a dead box (as in non vibrating and sound conducting) in my speaker cabinets.
They're not too bad, no boxy sound.
The hardwood was santos mahogany.
It has a density similar to mdf.
So I thought... why not.