Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

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howiez
Posts: 382
Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2014 5:23 pm
Location: Fox Valley, Wisconsin

Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#1 Post by howiez »

Years ago we built a Truck Tuba into a cabinet to hold a PS4 and some games/accessories for my oldest sons college dorm. Now my youngest would like to build one for his Honda Pilot. He upgraded all the factory speakers to Infinity units last fall and purchased an Infinity 10" sub for this project. The T/S parameters fall right in the plans, bottom end of Fs, top end of Qts and middle of Vas. It has switchable 2/4ohm voice coils. I'm curious if we can leverage the 2Ohm. All the door speakers are 3Ohm and the system took those like a champ. And IIRC, his factory sub is actually 2Ohm so we're hoping it works and we also have 92dB of sensitivity. We went with 7" thick to clear his sub (about 1" behind vented motor) but not take up too much space in the Pilot rear end. We will be using the factory subwoofer amp to drive, splicing into the factory 10" harness and bypassing it.

He purchased 3 sheets of 24x30 BB at our local Woodcraft last fall sometime. It's taken us until yesterday (Saturday) to get around to making sawdust. I helped him lay out all the cut plans, and helped him rip down some pieces on the table saw. We also used a circular saw and a guide to get the outsides as well. Once we had the major/odd pieces cut out, we set the saw for 6" and ripped all the rest of the boards into strips to cut the internal panels. Then we set the table saw angle and finished off the angled ends where required.

Today I used a roto-zip with 4 passes per side, not cutting too deep, to make the driver clearance hole in the octagon, and the hole in the top/side panel. My oldest stole our router for wedding projects and he's away on his honeymoon so we didn't bother to go steal it back for 2 cuts. I will need it when we round corners nearing the finish line, but for now we are set to glue. The RotoZip works if you only take a 1/16 or so each pass, or take it super slow. And it has an included circle jig so I cut fairly competent circles. Only a little belt sander clean up to remove some odd edges where the RotoZip tilted and cut a bit less than our target radius.

We plan to glue, then shoot 18ga pins to hold it. We'll glue all the internal panels (hopefully) in one sitting and then wax paper over and use second side to clamp it all. Then my son plans to paint the inside (I've created a monster) like I have done with my THT and two Titans. He marked out all the interior points, drew it all up and taped one side off for paint.
Pile o' cut panels.
Pile o' cut panels.
last side panel, laid out and pre-painted
last side panel, laid out and pre-painted
Other side with driver hole
Other side with driver hole
Driver spacer
Driver spacer
spacer glued up and clamped
spacer glued up and clamped

Bruce Weldy
Posts: 8301
Joined: Fri Nov 27, 2009 11:37 am
Location: New Braunfels, TX

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#2 Post by Bruce Weldy »

It's great that you get to do a project like this with your son.

6 - T39 3012LF
4 - OT12 2512
1 - T24
1 - SLA Pro
2 - XF210


"A system with a few knobs set up by someone who knows what they are doing is always better than one with a lot of knobs set up by someone who doesn't."

jimbo7
Posts: 849
Joined: Fri Dec 28, 2012 10:45 am
Location: St. Louis

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#3 Post by jimbo7 »

I can't look at these builds. They make me wanna dust off all my drivers and take out a loan for some wood. Looking forward to the build progress.
BFM builds:
XF212
T24 BP102 24"
2x SLA's 6-5" mids, 9- gt-302's
2x AT 14" MCM 55-2421
TrT 5" MCM 55-2421
AT 18" JBL GTO804
2x OT12 flat array
2x SLA Pro 2-Alpha 6's 2-Goldwoods
2x T39 24" 3012lf
Simplex 10 BP102

howiez
Posts: 382
Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2014 5:23 pm
Location: Fox Valley, Wisconsin

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#4 Post by howiez »

jimbo7 wrote: Sun Jul 24, 2022 7:32 pm I can't look at these builds. They make me wanna dust off all my drivers and take out a loan for some wood. Looking forward to the build progress.
Right? My son was lamenting how much he paid for the BB last fall. I think the stickers were still on it for just under $40 a sheet. We still can't get 5x5 at Woodcraft and 4x8's are $124 at our local big box lumber yard. At least Aruaco is down to $60, it was $100 all last year.

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Seth
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Location: Sacramento, California, USA
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Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#5 Post by Seth »

Howie, that's awesome man :thumbsup: I like hearing of the father son comradery, sharing interest in audio as well as the passion to build. Too cool.

I remember your college tuba build. You guys are gonna be floored when you fire up this new one in the Pilot! I built mine 8½ wide and made a different driver choice than you guys, but I'm confident you'll have similar results, with extremely visceral output all the way down to and below 20Hz... unless the factory sub amp has a highpass filter on it.

I really wish I could get Arauco out here in California. I've found it in ¾", but no one stocks the ½" near me. It looks like a real decent product and I'm always happy to shave a little weight off of a build.

Looking forward to watching the come together :thumbsup:
Build in process - 2 WH6, one Alpha 6a loaded, one PRV Audio 6MB250-NDY loaded

Two 2x6 shorty SLA Pro's
One T39, 16", 3012LF loaded
Tall AutoTuba, 20" wide, 2x 8" MCM 55-2421
TruckTuba, 8½" wide, 2x 8" MCM 55-2421

howiez
Posts: 382
Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2014 5:23 pm
Location: Fox Valley, Wisconsin

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#6 Post by howiez »

Ok, maybe there won't be a lot of visual detail to this build. Being my second, it's easier. Since we had precut all the panels, this was nearly a slam dunk. I had let the baffle/driver mount set an hour or so and used the chisel trick to clean up the squeeze out. So that part turned out nice and clean. Then Monday late afternoon we glued in panels 1 through 9 all at once and used the top(bottom?) to clamp overnight. We had cut all to length, except panel 3, the one with angles both ends. That one is harder to get on a table saw, being over 45deg, so I decided to let it fly. I'll cut flush with my router after the last side is glued on.

We had layed out all the build lines inside and out on both sides. This gave us nailing guides, paint guides, etc. We started with panel 1 and panel 8 glued and nailed together. I used a cleat to line them up while my son shot 2 pins in them for temporary hold. That gave us some support as we laid it on the side. Then we glued those two to the side, using a cleat at the corner to align, like the plans show. Then we worked down the edge and nailed those two to hold them while we raced ahead. Next, panel 4, then 2, using a carpenters square to hold them perpendicular while my son shot a few pins in them, both through panel 1 and the side. Then on to panel 7 and 6. A little hard to nail 6 and 7 together, but he pulled it off without any nails shooting out the side. Panel 7 to panel 1 was much easier to pin. Next panel 3 and 5, using a square again to help align. Lastly, panel 9, a few pins and we were done. I threw some wax paper over each joint that would touch the second side, then we dropped it on. We started at one corner, squaring up, then clamping. Then we'd work on to the next corner, pulling everything as close as we could. This is much easier with BB over Aruaco, but either would have worked fine. Then after 4 corners were clamped, we dropped two battens across the middle and clamped those to squeeze all the way across. I went back 90min later and scraped the outside squeeze out. My son did the mouth, his wing span allows him to reach all the way in the mouth. So we'll have nice clean corners where you can see in.

Tonight we may clean up a little PL, paint the inside and perhaps glue the other side on, we'll see how fast the paint sets up. Have to do a little wiring/soldering, and once paint is dry, I'll silicone the speakon in the mouth. I think he plans to use the driver to layout bolt holes and pre-drill for T-nuts and 10-32 hardware, we'll see.

Here are some clamp pictures, not much to look at until I take the clamps off here shortly. OK, in the third picture you can see my overkill DR200/T48 stack. Yes, we had them playing, it's mandatory while working in the shop!
clamp view panel 1
clamp view panel 1
clamp view mouth
clamp view mouth
clamp view panel 9
clamp view panel 9

howiez
Posts: 382
Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2014 5:23 pm
Location: Fox Valley, Wisconsin

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#7 Post by howiez »

It's been 24 hours, I took the clamps off and cleaned up the mouth a bit more. I'm leaving all the PL squeeze out and my goobers in the path. It's just too tiny to get in there. I was difficult to paint, I need to get a spray gun...
Hopefully later tonight we'll glue the other side on so we can maybe try it out next weekend.
Guts after some cleanup
Guts after some cleanup
Insides painted
Insides painted

howiez
Posts: 382
Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2014 5:23 pm
Location: Fox Valley, Wisconsin

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#8 Post by howiez »

Small update, the second side is unclamped and cleaned up. The harness is soldered and heat shrinked on both ends. We caulked the Speakon jack in when we glued the second side on. Yesterday we re-caulked, it leaked on one edge during testing! We test fit the driver and marked/drilled holes. My son used a C-clamp to pull/squeeze T-nuts in to those holes. Then we did a small sound test and leak test. The Truck Tuba does NOT keep up with the DR's, but you all knew that. We ended up turning them off, just to do the leak test and marvel at the deep bass. We can't wait to hear this with cabin gain!

I need to break in the driver too, didn't even think about that. Now on to outside finishing. We spot puttied all the nail holes. Then I have to fetch my router back from my oldest son so we can round the edges.
Harness jack end
Harness jack end
Harness driver end
Harness driver end
Sub test fit
Sub test fit
Sub test fit up close
Sub test fit up close
Leak and sound test.
Leak and sound test.

howiez
Posts: 382
Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2014 5:23 pm
Location: Fox Valley, Wisconsin

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#9 Post by howiez »

Not much to update, my son's been busy at work so not much progress. He sanded out all the spot putty, and routered the edges with a 3/8 roundover. We should be able to Duratex today, but I only have pictures of him starting to primer. If I remember, I'll take another snap all dressed in black before we Duratex.
Start of Primer
Start of Primer
Start of primer ISO
Start of primer ISO

himhimself
Posts: 599
Joined: Fri Nov 13, 2015 9:34 pm
Location: Vancouver BC & Bloomington IN

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#10 Post by himhimself »

Looking good, Howie. I'm curious though, as to why you bothered to paint the entire interior.
2xT30 (20", 3012LF)
2xT30 (21", 3012LF)
4xOtop J-array (Beta12, melded/straight piezos)
Truck Tuba (MCM)
Next up: 2xJack12 or family of table tubas

howiez
Posts: 382
Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2014 5:23 pm
Location: Fox Valley, Wisconsin

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#11 Post by howiez »

Shot of the back side primed. Going to put Duratex on the back today. Humid as heck here, so I don't know if we'll be able to do the front/top tomorrow.
Primed
Primed

CarterKraft
Posts: 255
Joined: Thu Oct 22, 2020 1:46 pm
Location: DFW

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#12 Post by CarterKraft »

Awesome job.
These things are pretty surprising in bedrooms.
Weldon Carter

howiez
Posts: 382
Joined: Sun Mar 16, 2014 5:23 pm
Location: Fox Valley, Wisconsin

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#13 Post by howiez »

CarterKraft wrote: Tue Sep 06, 2022 2:05 pm Awesome job.
These things are pretty surprising in bedrooms.
Thanks!
They seem to work very well in any small to medium sized room. My oldest rocked his dorm for a few years with one.

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Seth
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Location: Sacramento, California, USA
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Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#14 Post by Seth »

howiez wrote: Wed Sep 21, 2022 4:52 pm Thanks!
They seem to work very well in any small to medium sized room. My oldest rocked his dorm for a few years with one.
Well... How'd it go, wiring it to the factory amp and all?
Build in process - 2 WH6, one Alpha 6a loaded, one PRV Audio 6MB250-NDY loaded

Two 2x6 shorty SLA Pro's
One T39, 16", 3012LF loaded
Tall AutoTuba, 20" wide, 2x 8" MCM 55-2421
TruckTuba, 8½" wide, 2x 8" MCM 55-2421

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Chris_Allen
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Joined: Wed Jul 11, 2007 2:43 pm
Location: Huddersfield, UK

Re: Truck Tuba 7" thick - 10" Infinity Sub

#15 Post by Chris_Allen »

I really like the style of the Truck Tuba - looks surprisingly big next to the Titan 48.
Built:
6xDR200, 2xT39, 2xT48, 2xJack110, 1xOmni10.5, 1xAutotuba, 1xT18, 1xSLA Pro, 1xW8, 1xW10

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