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I have shifted direction and gone with the JL M10W5, acoustic suspension subwoofer, over my previous sub, the M10iB5. Both are pretty much the same sub, but the W5 is tuned and built to be in a box, and the 10iB5 is built to be a "free air" or "infinite baffle" sub. As my friend @David Analog, Earmark Marine founder and owner (retired) tells me, they are virtually identical from low through moderate gain, but that is where the AS sub will separate itself from the IB sub. My buddy @PEARCE , used the word, "tighter" base or more responsiveness. I don't know the technical terms nor can I describe it like a fine wine. But I can tell you that I have matured a bit in my desire, so in comes the AS sub.
Box building. I am going to do an MDO or MDF with a solvent glue verses a water based glue...for obvious reasons, were in a boat on water! But my question to all of you that have undergone or even applied a ready made structure is this...Our walls, even the straight ones, are anything but. The floor in the storage compartments on the 240 series is lowered about 3" as well as being set back. This is going to require some pretty significant "one off" customization. I have a call into David on angles and sound properties. I am not certain on any of that. I am getting that this sub is designed to be installed in an enclosure that is from 1/2 CU FT to 1 CU FT of internal volume. David has already told me to stay close to the 1 cu ft size with allowance to drift below if needed, but shoot for 1 cu ft vs .5 cu ft. My question is this, with some unique angles present as well as radius'ed walls, what is acceptable? Can you have more or less than 90 degrees on angles? Can you have a shelf cutout? Can you have a mounting wall that is sectioned with several angles? What does this box do, other than provide an enclosure of sealed airspace to allow maximum resistance for the woofer to work from? If it is literally a volume of air, are angles of importance?
Hope you guys have some practical application and discoveries you want to share!
Box building. I am going to do an MDO or MDF with a solvent glue verses a water based glue...for obvious reasons, were in a boat on water! But my question to all of you that have undergone or even applied a ready made structure is this...Our walls, even the straight ones, are anything but. The floor in the storage compartments on the 240 series is lowered about 3" as well as being set back. This is going to require some pretty significant "one off" customization. I have a call into David on angles and sound properties. I am not certain on any of that. I am getting that this sub is designed to be installed in an enclosure that is from 1/2 CU FT to 1 CU FT of internal volume. David has already told me to stay close to the 1 cu ft size with allowance to drift below if needed, but shoot for 1 cu ft vs .5 cu ft. My question is this, with some unique angles present as well as radius'ed walls, what is acceptable? Can you have more or less than 90 degrees on angles? Can you have a shelf cutout? Can you have a mounting wall that is sectioned with several angles? What does this box do, other than provide an enclosure of sealed airspace to allow maximum resistance for the woofer to work from? If it is literally a volume of air, are angles of importance?
Hope you guys have some practical application and discoveries you want to share!