Wow! Amazing work. Yeah, not in my price bracket too. Haha. These speaker are 200$ cad a pair for the kit. Not including the box of course.Terrific project![]()
From the design standpoint I love the all the geometries and reveals you've got going on! I think the finshed effect will be really nice.
I'm also impressed (and also not a little envious) with how you are making great use of 3D printing your process.
On a side note my brother-in-law actually makes really cool audio amplifiers that use old-school valves. I've always admired them but could never afford one LOL https://www.lampizator.com



Yes, many times. He has an amazing listening room in his office and home with sound dampening on the walls etc etc, He also makes his own speakers.Did you got the chance to hear the amp? How are they?
One of my home made "valve" amps.It’s been for ever since I’ve heard a vacuum tube referred to as a valve.
Tom
Beautiful setup!One of my home made "valve" amps.
Audio stuff is a self perpetuating disease.
Speaker building was my gateway to Festool.
That’s why I don’t design my speaker yet. I’m okay at designing okay subwoofer (I made a table with 2: 15 inch subwoofer). But speaker are another level. There’s so many proven design out there, speaker or subwoofer.Making a speaker seems easy. After all it is just a box made from MDF. (Usually) the joinery is just butt joints and glue plus wire brads. The real test is if the audio engineering works out.
In any case, your workmanship is well above par.
I do think that many speakers are covered with speaker box covering materials (carpet, fabric, veneers) to avoid the issues that paint MDF raises.
Pre-pandemic, I considered MDF an ideal material for painting. The older sheets had smooth calendared (run through mirror finish rollers) surfaces which would not raise grain as long as the surfaces were not sanded.
The stuff I see now has a surface that looks like it was sanded with 80 grit paper. It definitely will result in raised grain.
For the machined edges, I used grain filler intended for open grain wood floors. I apply it with a rag like rubbing on shoe polish. Very little sanding is required after the filler has dried. It does not matter which color match you use, as the paint will cover it. My first coat of finish is usually SealCoat (shellac) so I avoid raising the grain.
The “good lumber” distributor near me no longer carries MDF. He said that he can’t make money on the good stuff and he won’t sell the stuff that Home Depot and Lowes sells.
In any case, you might want to look into the vinyl speaker covering materials in the link I showed. Using it skirts around all these issues, but will look more “factory”.
I hope they sound as good as they look.
The earlier link was mostly carpet and felt. This link is for vinyl products, which though less practical, look a lot better:
Bose has nice stuff too haha. I had head phone for 10 years from them.Looking good!
Yes, many times. He has an amazing listening room in his office and home with sound dampening on the walls etc etc, He also makes his own speakers.
I really am not an audiophile but even I am blown away by the quality of sound. Then I go home to my little Bose bluetooth speaker ....![]()
Don’t know.I was reading through this properly and I'm blown away that a company providing a CNC service can't produce round holes?
Wt?
Buying tool to make speaker, and making speaker to do some woodworking and buy tools haha. I know what it is!One of my home made "valve" amps.
Audio stuff is a self perpetuating disease.
Speaker building was my gateway to Festool.
Mainly because the holes were cnc cut but were not perfectly round.sebr023 - Curious why you opted to cut your driver recesses with templates instead of a circle jig for a router?
I've used this M-power CRB7 for years with very good results. Have to make a few test cuts but easily get to about 0.25mm tolerance in driver cutouts. It's been pretty handy for some other stuff too.
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M-Power CRB7 MK3 Multi-Function Router Base
The CRB7 MK3 arms your router with the ability to cut fully micro-adjustable dadoes, mortises, circles, and indexed grooves for faux paneling and shelving systems.www.rockler.com
I also have a shaper origin, than I barely used. I used it for both my speaker project et subwoofer. Haven’t use it on this one.FWIW...I don't use MDF very often but when I do I always apply a coat of Zinsser BIN Shellac primer for the 1st go-around, then very, very lightly hand sand the surface with 400 grit and then apply a 2nd coat of Zinsser. After that it's business as usual, I've never found Zinsser to raise the grain and I find it's a joy to use if you want an absolutely smooth, paintable surface on MDF.
Nice job on the speakers, I like the radiuses and the relieved areas. They will look nice once painted as long as the paint is not applied too thick.
I lovethe idea of 3D printing templates for routing difficult areas. I never really gave any thought to purchasing a 3D printer but your examples have really made me think otherwise...I thank you for that.
Unfortunately or fortunately, that has also made me rethink that I need to reconsider learning Fushion. I started that adventure 2 years ago and then life got in the way. As a side note, I purchased a new Shaper Origin in 2018 and have still not used it except to update the software yearly...and that's nothing to be proud of.
The Fushion education should change the Origin debacle.
Before MDF was introduced for speaker enclosures, Wharfedale used wood panels filled with sand in the middle to dampen and eliminate any resonances. I had a pair of Wharfedale W60D speakers in the 70's and at the time they were considered to be cutting edge as far as box/material design went.I think that MDF is the preferred material for speaker boxes because it is acoustically inert. That is, the flat panels will not resonate and make ghost tones that will overlay the pure acoustic tones.
Tone boards (like the front and rear panels on a guitar) need to resonate to project a bigger sound. But I believe you do not want to introduce a new sound board in a speaker boxes.
