Hi,
I had put up my existing speakers for sale sometime back.
That didn't happen.
Rather than ditch the speakers I was thinking of using the two 15" Fostex FW405N make a subwoofer.
I do not want the subwoofer to be too big or vibrate too much. I want the bass output to be low, tight, fast and detailed. I hate boomy base.
Now I do not know head nor tail of making subwoofers, I tried a few sites but couldn't zero on a suitable idea.
One idea seems to be to set up like the B&W PV1 or the B&O Beolab 11 but they use small drivers and exotic shapes.
I would love to set the two woofers, back to back, into a sphere, I am even ok with a box (easier to make) - but what would be the ideal size and can I reduce the size by stuffing the insides with some material? Also where can I get such a sphere?
Any help would be appreciated.
Tech specs of FW405 -
Qts - 0.34
Fs - 20Hz
Xmax - 7mm
I had put up my existing speakers for sale sometime back.
That didn't happen.
Rather than ditch the speakers I was thinking of using the two 15" Fostex FW405N make a subwoofer.
I do not want the subwoofer to be too big or vibrate too much. I want the bass output to be low, tight, fast and detailed. I hate boomy base.
Now I do not know head nor tail of making subwoofers, I tried a few sites but couldn't zero on a suitable idea.
One idea seems to be to set up like the B&W PV1 or the B&O Beolab 11 but they use small drivers and exotic shapes.
I would love to set the two woofers, back to back, into a sphere, I am even ok with a box (easier to make) - but what would be the ideal size and can I reduce the size by stuffing the insides with some material? Also where can I get such a sphere?
Any help would be appreciated.
Tech specs of FW405 -
Qts - 0.34
Fs - 20Hz
Xmax - 7mm