Thanks for the compliments... I'm really loving this build. I could totally do this for a living if it would pay the rent!!
So it's been a roller coaster moving this forward. I'm being held back by my inexperience and making loads of stupid mistakes. But I think I have managed to pull myself out of a few ruts and produced something worthy... IMHO.
Next job was the body. I didn't want to see any screws or butt joints. I also decided to deviate from the plans and make the baffle permanent and the back removable.
I now realise that Bill's instructions have a lot of wisdom in them and I only come unstuck if I try to second guess them
The instructions say this is a 3/10 difficulty build... but I think doing it this way easily make it a 5/10. It taxed me in ways I had no idea were coming... not least the wiring and soldering.... but more on that later!
I recently fell out of love with Harbor Freight. But I still think their clamps are good value. I went a picked up $100 worth of various clamps:
This is where the binding posts will go:
I'm sure there is a better way to do this but I had to do some strange stuff to make everything lie flat as the PL was drying! Here I am PLing the inserts the rear cover will screw into.
Front & rear shot of the completed body:
Close up of the binding post spot:
I didn't like the 1/4" rounded look so I tried a quick comparison with a 45 degree chamfer which I have liked to look of in other peoples builds:
I preferred the round edge for this build.
So I played a little with the stain & tung oil. But I managed to get some stain on one of the baffles and I was committed.
This is actually the look I was
specifically trying to avoid. I call it the "... overtly dark home made wood working project look..."
I was kind of pissed because I wanted a light color. Also, staining ply wood is a mugs game... especially when you are as generous with the PL as I am. I reckon a day was lost trying to get the stain to take and not be blotchy.
Plywood comes with it's own glue to deal with as well as your own!!!
Sigh. It just kept getting darker and darker!
I will NEVER use plywood again unless I am going to paint it over.
I have another thread running for the cross-overs here
http://billfitzmaurice.info/forum/viewt ... =5&t=18713 but basically this is what I have:
I cut the "no man's land pad" (as I call it) to make it work. Left.
Quick solder and some hot glue gun action:
Good old REW and its generator. You can do a slow sweep from 100 to 10,000 Hz and hear the cross over working. It's kind of satisfying to do this for the first time
And so onto the wiring... and boy trying to wire the drivers like this is a PITA!!! To make things worse I got some sawdust in my right eye last night when I was routing and IT STILL HURTS LIKE HELL TODAY!!!!!

so soldering this really hurt. It hurts so bad that I have a head ache and my nose is running in sympathy. Even writing this update hurts!!
I was wearing safety glasses but I need to upgrade to goggles for routing for sure.
Annnnyyyyy hooooooooo:
The tweeters were easy because I could hang them out front to solder but the woofers.... the only way I could do them, because the magnets are so big relative to the hole, was to screw each speaker in place and then solder through the back.
I imagine I used similar skills to a gynaecologist. This task was akin to decorating a hall way through a letter box
Took me 3 hours to wire one cabinet like this. But I got there.... in the end.... I had to do rounds: solder... eye drops... rest... solder... eye drops... rest... Waaaaaaaaaa!
I had grand plans to put the cross-over at the bottom beneath the binding posts but the bottom woofer magnet interfered. I'm not sure I like these cross-over boards. IMO they are better than hot gluing components to the cabinet but because they are "universal" they are a little on the large side. Perhaps I'll add an inch to the bottom next time or maybe find / make smaller boards.
Here are some pix of one finished cab... Actually I'm kind of liking the dark wood look. I think I might have gotten away with it...
It looks better than I thought it would yesterday! I'm waiting for some dome head screws to arrive for the tweeters.
I look forward to finishing the second one tomorrow so I can hear them for real. At the moment I have one SLA and one 6x9 (in a box) with a T18 plus miniDSP doing its thing as my PC speakers.
I was pleased with the 6x9's in a box... although it needed plenty of DSP... but it's really interesting...
I left the DSP settings as is on the 6x9 and bypassed everything to the SLA except for the cross-over at 90Hz.
The SLA is making the 6x9 in a box sound like it is submerged in a bucket of water!
Can't wait to finish this!
Hopefully my eye will feel better tomorrow.