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The objectives of this project are legion:
Replace an existing pair of VERY cheap plastic speakers.
Use my existing inventory. Because the woofer and tweeter were so inexpensive I purchased 8 pieces of each on impulse.
Eliminate (or reduce the size of) the full sheet of ½ in. MDF sitting in my garage. It was in my way.
Provide a very easy and low-cost design for neophyte speaker builders.
Based on the output of Abacus, I will get a very flat response with a sealed 7 liter box. The predicted f3dB is 133 Hz, sufficient for use with a subwoofer.
1. Initial Design and Box Assembly
I used Microsoft Works Spreadsheet to do the volume calculations. Using the 0.6 x 1.0 x 1.6 golden rule dimensions yields a box size of 4.62 x 7.7 x 12.32 inches. I did not want to use the weird fractions, so I adjusted to 5 x 7.5 x 12 inches, close enough for me. This gives a box volume of 0.260 ft.^3, compared to the ideal value 0f 0.247 ft. ^3. I figure the slight rounding up will help accommodate the internal speaker volume, which is very minimal.
The cabinet is made with 1/2 in. MDF with no internal bracing. All the joints are butt-type and glued with polyurethane glue. Prior to beginning assembly, lay the parts out on the bench and label them for east identification. I used “A” for the baffle and back, “B” for the small top and bottom pieces, and “C” for the two sides. See Figure 1.
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Now it is time to route the recesses for the woofer and tweeter. This next step can be considered optional, but lends a professional look and better sonic quality to the speaker. A tweeter which is not flush mounted can have horrendous refraction problems. Routing can be done freehand our by using a guide bushing and a template. The woofer I used has rounded corners and the tweeter has truncated corners. The templates I made have square corners. This results in a rounded corner with a ¼ inch radius. This will yield a bigger hole than required, but I figure a template routed hole which is slightly too big will look better than the irregular edges achieved by routing each hole by hand. Furthermore, I think the time to construct a 100% accurate template exceeds the cost of the components in this project.
Figure 8. Router template assembled on baffle
I constructed the template out of ½ inch MDF scraps and some ¾ inch pine scraps. First clamp the two pines strips to the side of the enclosure. I cut two scraps 4 1/8 inch wide to allow for the extra 1/8 inch from my guide bushing in the router. Then two other scraps are cut long enough to cross the baffle and the pine strips. The four pieces of ½ inch MDF are centered around the marked outline of the woofer. Then the four pieces of MDF are nailed to the pine strips. I used a pneumatic nail gun to drive 1 inch 18g brads through the MDF into the pine. This can be done by hand too. The finished template is shown in Figure 8.
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![]() PE 4" Extended Range Speaker 269-469 |
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Unfortunately the optimum crossover for the tweeter overlaps the alleged dip in woofer’s response. Therefore I will choose a 2nd order crossover, set to 4.25kHz. I chose to use a Linkwitz-Reilly algorithm, well, just because. You could choose Butterworth or Bessel too.
I clicked on over to Steven Reid’s online Java calculators at:
http://www.globalnode.com/users/stevenr/spkrs/
Given the above criteria and the 8W impedance of my two speakers, the crossover calculator indicated I needed 2.34µF capacitors and 600µH inductors.
Here is where I went VERY unconventional: my component selection. Because this was such a cheap project I didn’t want to spend $30 on crossover components for a $5 speaker. So I used what I had access to.
The inductors are from Gowanda. They are 100µH each, toroid inductors with an iron powder core. They are good up to 100kHz, and have about 25mW of equivalent series resistance. They are rated for a DC saturation current of 2A. All in all, vary marginal, but I did have 24 pieces for free. I guess they’ll do. Each leg of the crossover used 6 of these in series.
The capacitors are unconventional too. I used Taiyo-Yuden ceramic multi-layer SMT capacitors. The only cheesy thing about them (for this application) is they are rated for only 25V. This is incredibly low compared to most crossover capacitors, but remember these are only 15W speakers. The reason most people use 250V caps is for linear performance, not because they need the breakdown performance. I used part # TMK316BJ474, which is a 25V, 1206 size, X7R dielectric 0.47µF capacitor with 20% tolerance. These are rated for about 500mA ripple current each and have an ESR in the low milliohm range. I used five in parallel on each leg of the crossover.
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Finishing. Sigh. I have some nice veneer. I have a paint sprayer and a compressor. But I am not going to cast pearls to swine. I went to Home Depot and bought some black marble contact paper.
Contact paper is a roll of self-adhesive vinyl covering in a variety of colors and styles. I wanted to do the paisley … not! Actually there was an oak and a pine style which could be used in the future. The great thing about contact paper is if I decide to paint this in the future I can peel the paper right off!
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Special thanks to "TheSpeakerGuy" (name withheld to protect the innocent) for saving us all a bunch of money on this project. We appreciate your contributions both here and on the technical discussion board!!
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