How To Build A Guitar Speaker Box Or Build Two For Your Stereo.

 by Re-design
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Finished.jpg
I wanted a new guitar speaker to go with the tube amp I'm building. The speaker will stay out in my shop so it doesn't need to be anything too special. Tolex covering might be too easily damaged so I just sprayed the outside black after a light sanding. I found a great "cheap" grille cloth material. I can't wait to try it out on my new amp that's about finished. It sounded great when I tried it out on my shop radio.

The WARNING!

Before we get too far into this let me say this, I'm not trying to teach a complete course in woodworking or include all of the steps needed to complete this project. I'm not going to warn you of all of the dangers of working with tools. You will have to fill in some gaps here and there or maybe huge gaps in some places. I don't take any responsibility for any loss either financial, physical, mental etc. either real or imagined.

If you don't agree to this please look at another instructable. If you do then I hope you have as much fun building yours as I did building mine.
 
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Step 1: Materials and Tools Needed

Materials needed.

One half sheet 3/4" MDF or cabinet grade plywood. ( MDF is better for this than particle board)
Alternate material: 1 x 12 pine or poplar boards would make great side and top pieces. It would eliminate some long cuts and the front and back would be perfectly parallel. The downside is that good 1 x 12 boards are more expensive.
Wood glue
1 1/2" wood screws. I used black sheetrock screws
2" finish nails if not making biscuit joints
4 plastic feet or small casters
A handle of your choice
1/4" jack
Speaker wire
Speaker of your choice
Mounting bolts to fit the speaker and long enough to pass through the MDF.
Grille cloth if you want to protect you speaker and have a more finished box



Tools you must have

Eye protection
Ear protection if using power tools
Saw to make a straight cut
Saw to make an inside curved cut. May be a coping saw, saber saw etc.
Screw driver (to fit the screws of course)
Measuring instruments
Marking instruments
A square of some sort (something as simple as a heavy index card would be useable)
Compass to draw your speaker circle
Heavy duty stapler


Tools it would be nice to have

Circular saw and guide for long cuts better yet a table saw
Electric drill with drill for pilot holes and screw bit for power screwing
Router with 3/4" flat bit and circle guide
1/4" round over bit for Router
Rotozip saw with circle guide or saber saw with circle guide
Biscuit cutter and size #20 biscuits
Several different sized bar clamps
8" square
Random Orbital Sander and pads
Power stapler
An air conditioned and heated workshop

masterinstructorman98 says: Apr 3, 2013. 5:03 PM
would you be so kind to give me the actually dimension for this speaker project I quite do not understand for what reason anyways thanks
essecially for the front of the speaker on how long it has to be and such thanks
Re-design (author) in reply to masterinstructorman98Apr 5, 2013. 5:28 AM
The drawing at the beginning shows it to be about 1'-6" tall, 1' wide and 1' deep if I remember correctly. If you speaker is a different size you box may be a different size though.
Re-design (author) in reply to masterinstructorman98Apr 5, 2013. 5:28 AM
The drawing at the beginning shows it to be about 1'-6" tall, 1' wide and 1' deep if I remember correctly. If you speaker is a different size you box may be a different size though.
daftsupernova says: Sep 11, 2011. 5:07 PM
In all, how much did this cost?
Re-design (author) in reply to daftsupernovaSep 11, 2011. 7:36 PM
Not much.

I didn't have to buy any tools.

I had the wood in my stash.  If bought new probably $20 worth of wood.

The speaker was a unit I bought surplus from Radio Shack Outlet store for $8 or so.

It would really sound better with a better speaker but it sounds good enough for a practice amp.

There are some reasonable speakers for less than $50.
CROmakers says: Apr 12, 2011. 10:19 AM
that looks like glass wool
Re-design (author) in reply to CROmakersApr 12, 2011. 10:55 AM
It's fiberglass insulation, often called "glass wool".
zourza says: Dec 7, 2009. 9:25 PM
 does this have to be plugged into an amp to work? or could i plug my guitar straight in?
Re-design (author) in reply to zourzaDec 8, 2009. 4:36 AM
You need an amp.  For practice you can build a small half watt amp.  LINK The 2 watt tube amp I built sounds pretty good on it.  Not nearly loud enough for stage but plenty of sound for practice.

Parts for the amp in the link can be gotten at Radio Shack.  They stock all the parts standard.  There are refinements that people have made to it like tone controls etc.

Good luck.
Re-design (author) says: Aug 18, 2009. 4:06 AM
learntodostuff says: Aug 13, 2009. 3:52 PM
what guitar is that ?
Re-design (author) in reply to learntodostuffAug 13, 2009. 5:05 PM
It's a Torres Kit that copies the Les Paul. I built it earlier in the year. Speaking of Les Paul, he passed on today. That's sad.
Parts-Express says: Aug 13, 2009. 9:52 AM
Nice design and overall look. You should submit it to the Parts Express project showcase: http://www.parts-express.com/projectshowcase/projectindex.cfm
moduleinst says: Aug 12, 2009. 9:03 PM
Very reasonable design and quality info. Thanks.
moduleinst says: Aug 12, 2009. 9:01 PM
Very reasonable design and quality into. Thanks.
bigredlevy says: Aug 11, 2009. 9:15 PM
Fantastic design mate, this speaker box would make an awesome practice guitar amplifier. i made something similar with a noisy cricket 1/2 watt amp circuit. Easy to solder up, works like a charm, and is much louder than you would think.

Noisy cricket:
http://www.beavisaudio.com/projects/NoisyCricket/
Re-design (author) in reply to bigredlevyAug 12, 2009. 7:35 PM
Thanks. I really like you site and the instruction page for you cricket looks great.
pfred2 in reply to bigredlevyAug 12, 2009. 6:14 PM
I never much cared for LM386s myself. I've built a few of these and they're not much more complicated than that 386 circuit you link to and I'd say probably a bit nicer:

http://www.redcircuits.com/Page1.htm

You can get a solid 10 watts or so out of it. About as loud as a practice amp. Biased right I get smooth feedback.

The circuit is pretty liberal for parts substitution depending on what you have on hand. You can add a couple extra pots to the preamp op amp for some nice overdrive too. One thing I always need to do is add some voltage regulators as I never have high voltage op amps on hand. I built one of these with a vintage scavenged JRC4558 and it is sweet!

One of these days I'll have to post an Instructable about it I suppose. That, and this wicked overdrive schematic I found online. I swear that box does it all!

I can't find the original page today but I think I cite it in this:

ftp://ftp.cadsoft.de/eagle/userfiles/projects/overdrive.zip

Anyways happy soldering.
Skyfinity in reply to pfred2Aug 12, 2009. 6:37 PM
Great schematics, but the noisy cricket is all available at Radioshack. That's super convenient for people like me that try to avoid ordering things. I like yours though anyway. :)
pfred2 in reply to SkyfinityAug 13, 2009. 1:59 AM
As I mentioned in my previous post the circuit is flexible enough to allow a wide range of substitution parts. I've never built it with the exact parts. Just similar ones. Substituting is a worthwhile skill for a hobbyist to cultivate. For instance I can't honestly say I've ever quite seen a 22V dual tap transformer in my life. Even though I've several hundred pounds of salvaged transformers lying around! So yeah try to build one, what is the worst thing that could happen? It could blow up? Makes for a great story when it does! Did I ever tell you the story of when I built a 78XX power supply and used an incorrect pin out from the back of a Rat Shack blister package .... Let me tell you them puppies blow up like M-80s! Almost makes you not want to do initial circuit power ups at 3 AM, nah, when it is done it goes under the gun.
dudejetfighter says: Aug 12, 2009. 6:47 PM
nice Ible. i love your les paul, nice color
Re-design (author) in reply to dudejetfighterAug 12, 2009. 7:34 PM
Thanks for the complement. It was a torres kit. I sprayed it with Stewmac paint the put 10 coats of acrylic on it. Some day I'll get a real Les Paul (maybe).
Yerboogieman says: Aug 11, 2009. 9:21 PM
Very nice box, i like the idea of the grill cloth, i hate it when people always push in the center of speakers.
Skyfinity in reply to YerboogiemanAug 12, 2009. 11:33 AM
I had to think a while to figure out what you meant, but now I get it. I agree, that aggravates me tremendously. Some people just take joy out of permanently ruining things. These people need to learn how to contribute something to society.
Yerboogieman in reply to SkyfinityAug 12, 2009. 12:29 PM
Rather than destroy it.
pfred2 in reply to YerboogiemanAug 12, 2009. 5:32 PM
If it wasn't for destruction none of us would be here! We are star stuff.
Yerboogieman in reply to pfred2Aug 12, 2009. 7:16 PM
There is useful destruction, then there is useless and stupid destruction.
Skyfinity in reply to pfred2Aug 12, 2009. 6:02 PM
Nice try. :) I agree destruction is nature, but waste is not. Nothing is ever wasted in nature.
Skyfinity in reply to YerboogiemanAug 12, 2009. 1:26 PM
Exactly.
Yerboogieman in reply to SkyfinityAug 12, 2009. 2:09 PM
No kidding.
Skyfinity in reply to YerboogiemanAug 12, 2009. 3:11 PM
For those of you who have experienced such a tragedy and came to instructables for help, you can apparently un-dent speaker cones with various types of<a rel="nofollow" href="http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20060916065553AARKAqi">vacuum cleaners.</a> Others have used masking tape and (for metal) the sub-zero liquid that comes out of a air-blaster canister when turned upside down. A vacuum seems the safest though.<br/>
Xamith in reply to SkyfinityAug 12, 2009. 3:21 PM
You have no idea how much it bothers me to walk through stores and see speaker cones pushed in.
Yerboogieman in reply to XamithAug 12, 2009. 3:54 PM
Especially, because you can't hear if they are to your liking in good condition before you buy them.
pfred2 in reply to YerboogiemanAug 12, 2009. 5:34 PM
The center dome in a speaker is called the "dustcap" It is only there to keep dust out of the voice coil, not to contribute to the sound.
Yerboogieman in reply to pfred2Aug 12, 2009. 7:17 PM
if you push it far enough, you can damage the voice coil.
pfred2 in reply to YerboogiemanAug 13, 2009. 2:03 AM
Unlikely as the voice coil in most speakers is a wire wrapped paper tube surrounded by steel. You must have a big red S on your chest if you can push it in that hard!
Skyfinity in reply to pfred2Aug 12, 2009. 6:05 PM
Very true. :) Regardless, it's ascetically unpleasant and weakens the cap's dome shape, making it easier to rip and become a vibrating piece of rubbish. If that doesn't ruin it, they'll find a way. They always find a way.
Yerboogieman in reply to SkyfinityAug 12, 2009. 7:20 PM
Also, it makes one compare it to feces.
Skyfinity in reply to YerboogiemanAug 12, 2009. 7:44 PM
Didn't exactly think of that one... but, whatever...
pfred2 in reply to SkyfinityAug 13, 2009. 2:04 AM
Same stuff they use for brains :)
Farewell88s says: Aug 12, 2009. 1:14 PM
I was thinking of doing the same thing, but with 2 twelve inch speakers, covering the amp with tolex, Marshall style side handles.... But I don't think the insulation is really necessary, most guitar cabinets are just empty.
pfred2 in reply to Farewell88sAug 12, 2009. 5:36 PM
Fiberglass is great for destroying the voice coil of the speaker. Those little bits of glass get in there and just saw back and forth to the beat!
Re-design (author) in reply to Farewell88sAug 12, 2009. 1:17 PM
In a closed box system it does make some difference. You an always try both ways and stay with the one you like best if you use screws.
bruno13069 says: Aug 12, 2009. 7:00 AM
I could imagine that being sold in a mid-priced guitar shop. Very clean and profession looking exterior. I would possibly staple or tack the padding into place to make sure it doesn't shift and touch the speaker. Nice 'ible!
SinAmos says: Aug 11, 2009. 10:58 PM
Very reasonable design and quality info. Thanks.
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