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#81 |
Blu-ray Champion
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DK,
Buy some foam from Wal-Mart and attach it with spray glue under the riser and cover it with carpet. It will dampen the riser better. For the ED sub, if you attack longer legs to the subwoofer, you may get better results. Look at the 4 inch legs I attached to my round Hsu subwoofers in Post #2. The difference in sound quality was noticeable. |
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#83 |
Blu-ray Champion
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#84 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#86 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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The one from Wal-Mart is 15" x17" with a thickness of 2". You can try fabric stores or art and craft stores to see if you can find something cheaper. ![]() ![]() ![]() You can buy the legs from Home Depot or Lowes. These are ready-made table legs. Ask someone in the store for table legs. They also sell installation plates for around $2 each. ![]() Last edited by Big Daddy; 04-02-2009 at 05:29 AM. |
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#87 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I don't need to go hunting around for the cheapest price on foam. I just wanted to make sure I was looking at the right foam. At my local Walmart, the foam is located near the Poly-fill bags (same isle). Did your cost around $8 each? How many do you think I should get for both subs (if my DIY sub even needs it)? I am also wondering where I can find some more carpet samples and if Walmart sells the table legs as well. That would be nice to make one last trip to Walmart and be done (with this portion of the project at least
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#88 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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The only places that have carpet samples are Home Depot/Lowes and carpet specialty stores. Table legs are only sold at hardware stores. The short ones (2" to 6") are from $2.50 to $6.50 each. Plain ones without any designs cost less. I am currently working on diffusers to attach to the ceiling. I practically live in Home Depot. I am sure as soon as CrazyBlue finds out, he is going to start worrying about diffusers. ![]() |
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#90 | |
Mad Scientist
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crazyBLUE, I know you put additional legs on your front firing sub, but wondering exactly what kind of differences you noticed after doing so. Last edited by Big Daddy; 04-03-2009 at 05:38 PM. |
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#91 | |
Moderator
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#92 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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The biggest effect when you raise a subwoofer is that it may become a lot louder. You don't have to believe me or CrazyBlue. There is scientific reason behind this. The sound waves interact with the room boundaries (walls, floor, and ceiling) and create standing waves or room modes. The standing waves are different between floor and ceiling, side walls, and end walls, unless any of these dimensions are the same (the worst kind of room is a perfect cube). There are three basic types of modes: axial, tangential, and oblique. Low frequency wavelengths are much longer (e.g., 56.5ft at 20Hz, 22.6ft at 50Hz, and 11.3ft at 100Hz) than higher frequency wavelengths (e.g., 3.8ft at 300Hz, 1.1ft at 1,000Hz, and 1 inch at 13,000Hz). This is important, especially below 150hz or so. Above 150hz, the waves are small enough that they are not affected by the room size as much. They bounce around every which way. Standing waves only become a significant problem at lower frequencies (below 100 Hz) because we normally set the crossover frequency around 85Hz. Long wavelength bass frequencies travel back and forth bouncing off the walls. Axial Modes are the strongest and the most important, and the easiest to compute. Tangential Modes are about half as loud, and Oblique Modes are about a quarter as loud. They tend to be the least important, but if an oblique room mode occurs near another mode, that frequency may still be a problem. It is best to calculate all room modes to see where any overlap may be. The three types of AXIAL modes are LENGTH, WIDTH, and HEIGHT. Knowing the speed of sound and the wavelengths of different frequencies, we can easily calculate these three types of axial modes. When you move a subwoofer around a room, you are basically trying to deal with horizontal axial resonance modes (length and width). Almost everybody discovers this and tries to deal with it. Unfortunately, the vast majority of people are not aware that subwoofers and waves do not understand horizontal or vertical. By raising a subwoofer, you are actually dealing with the vertical (height) resonance mode. To fully understand this, be patient and read A Guide to Subwoofers (Part II): Standing Waves & Room Modes. Last edited by Big Daddy; 04-03-2009 at 12:09 AM. |
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#95 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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If you want the subwoofer to be loud (SPL), you tune high (e.g., 40Hz). At high tuning the sound quality will not be very good. If you care more about sound quality, you tune fairly low (e.g., 25Hz). Lower tuned boxes sound more like sealed boxes. What you experienced is not unusual. Poly-fill slightly lowers the tuning of the enclosure. This makes the bass sound a bit deeper (better quality) at the expense of SPL. It is a small change, not very drastic. You can always turn the volume up slightly to compensate. Last edited by Big Daddy; 04-04-2009 at 08:25 PM. |
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#96 |
Moderator
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this also improves the subs performance in handling the lower extensions as well. you've also eliminated any reflective points for your subwoofer, letting you hear the subwoofer instead of the corner that it was in. if i may assume, your sub was more 'boomy' sounding louder in that corner, appearing louder.
loud doesnt necessarily mean good. Big Daddy, i hope you didnt mind me posting another thread. id hope you would consider my invite as well. |
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#97 |
Moderator
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I just loosely filled my cabinet as well with polly fill, and although the benefits I heard were minimal, I do sense a greater "tightness" with the lower db's. I also just completed risers for my sub (and both fronts as they are on ceramic tile) last night, and I think this has contributed to better AQ overall from my front soundstage as well. Pics of the risers I built are in my gallery (pics 1 and 2) and I listed the parts I used in the HT Construction thread if you want details. I took Big Daddy's advise and built my own.
I also was able to attach some black PVC piping to the bottom feet of the sub to further lift it up another 2-3 inches (look closely in pic #1). Everything was cheap and easy to do! Last edited by Fors*; 04-11-2009 at 06:06 PM. |
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#98 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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#99 |
Moderator
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The pictures of the polly-fill going into the sub are on my cell phone, so they will look rather bad, but you are right, I should upload them. As far as the pictures for the risers being built, I was forced to do this outside (I had to cut the wood myself as Lowes' saw was out of order....
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#100 | |
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