Composite Construction
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Composite Construction
In the past I'd been planning to build my next cab using foamcore ply or something similar but in the end shelved those ideas due to sourcing difficulties. I recently came across a company that supplies composite products for boat building so am now thinking about building the cab using dense 1/2" foam panels instead of plywood and then covering the foam with fibreglass or carbon fibre fabric before epoxying it.
Any thoughts?
Alex
Any thoughts?
Alex
- Bill Fitzmaurice
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Bill has purposely designed these cabinets to be as light as possible while still retaining more-than-adequate strength. Compare their weight with "similar" commercial offerings. If you want to knock a little weight off of your cabs, just use 3/8" ply for the horn path, as others have done with great success.alexclaber wrote:Any thoughts?
JMHO
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Making all the internal plates (except baffle) from 3/8" would be a 25% weight savings on a significant amount of wood. I do have to ask if it is worth the extra effort, dados, etc.
FTR, my T39 in 24" external width is 74 pounds naked. No finish, no screws, no driver, no hardware. It is mostly American Birch, with braces made from 1/2" BB scraps.
FTR, my T39 in 24" external width is 74 pounds naked. No finish, no screws, no driver, no hardware. It is mostly American Birch, with braces made from 1/2" BB scraps.
My biggest worry is that when I'm dead and gone, my wife will sell my toys for what I said I paid for them.
The extra steps to use the 3/8" ply would be far less time-consuming than attempting other exotic methods to trim a bit of weight, undoubtedly.Bruce wrote:Making all the internal plates (except baffle) from 3/8" would be a 25% weight savings on a significant amount of wood. I do have to ask if it is worth the extra effort, dados, etc.
I can understand that there would be reasons for wanting the cabinets as light as possible. People with physical handicaps (such as bad backs) want to lift as little as possible. People who fill their little import cars to the brim to haul their gear to gigs need to keep their total weight down. People who frequently have to haul their gear up and down stairs want to haul as little weight as possible. Cabs on sticks or being flown would also benefit from lighter weight.
For most of us, the relatively light weight of Bill's designs is a plus. For some, the possibility of making them even lighter is an absolute necessity.
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That'll be everyone gigging smaller UK venues then!Mikey wrote:People who frequently have to haul their gear up and down stairs want to haul as little weight as possible.
From what Bill's said the cost will be prohibitive but I will double-check. I have considered 9mm ply but it would require quite a low more bracing.
Chopping up pieces of foam, gluing them together and then covering in carbonfibre doesn't seem any harder than building in ply, though more time consuming. I'd be willing to do it for the weight saving if the material cost is not obscene.
Alex
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28kg/62 pounds is not unreasonable at all in a vertical configuration.
All my cabs seem to come in heavier that everybody elses. For example, my naked T39/24" is 74 pounds. This is American Birch (yuck) with a few BB pieces, all in 1/2". Scale is a very accurate beam balance type, and not suspected to be inaccurate.
All my cabs seem to come in heavier that everybody elses. For example, my naked T39/24" is 74 pounds. This is American Birch (yuck) with a few BB pieces, all in 1/2". Scale is a very accurate beam balance type, and not suspected to be inaccurate.
My biggest worry is that when I'm dead and gone, my wife will sell my toys for what I said I paid for them.
- Harley
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My cabs are from Italian Poplar so yes they'd be way lighter than yours.bgavin wrote:All my cabs seem to come in heavier that everybody elses. For example, my naked T39/24" is 74 pounds. This is American Birch (yuck) with a few BB pieces, all in 1/2". .
I have to carpet the poplar though as it is quite soft and dings easy. It would not take paint finish and stand up to the knocks.
Oh....and I just realised my O15 does not have the APT tweeter in it, that would add a couple of kgs as well
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