Hello. I'm looking for a pair of 4" drivers primarily for low/bass frequencies. Putting in a compact car's factory holes which max out 4". Will surround with MDF and insulation. Soubds good in your demo. Do you like the bass, and does it travel?
Those drivers would be great for that. They create real nice clean bass for their size. I’m sure you would be happy with their performance as a subwoofer. (Link in the video dec)
I doubt these will be loud enough for in a vehicle. I wouldn't put them in a car door or in the dash, or above the trunk, etc. Only _maybe_ in a proper subwoofer box, assuming you really know what you're doing.
Wait those are Midbass drivers? 4 inches? That's the size they use in most 2.1 computer speaker systems....for the "subwoofer". Fancy Kenwood receiver you got there...and that TEAC EQ.
Fans, boomboxes, and more yea. Link in description. Most 2.1 systems have the two satellites that have some junky fullrange speaker with a poor frequency response down to 250hz and the “sub” (like you said it’s usually a mid-bass or full range just with a crossover) to play the rest down to 50 hz or so. A good pair of bookshelf speakers will have the same range as a 2.1 system. That Kenwood amp I picked out of a electronic recycling bin. I was broken, but I was able to fix it.
@@BGTech1 That's a simple fix. See, this is why I like scouring broken electronics and seeing what's wrong with them, as I can both learn from it and gain from it.
Fans, boomboxes, and more yea thats how I’ve learned a lot about electronics too. that’s one of the reasons I do teardown videos on my channel so people can learn
Depends on the enclosure. I would consider it a midbass, but it can play all thought the mids and lower-highs as well. And if you build a low-tuned enclosure for it, it can easily play low bass (yes, I can assure you this will hit 30hz with ease if your box is tuned near 30hz.
@@mhnoni I did one tuned to 33hz but I can't remember the specs on it at all and I don't have it anymore. I wod reccomend not tuning it lower than 40hz, but it's definitely possible to go a lot lower if you want to hit specific low notes.
@@bailey2517 thanks for the info but I have no clue where to start, any suggestions on how to build a box to hit 40hz? should it be a simple big ported box? or a special design like putting the speaker inside the box with a special port to produce the sound (4rth or 6th order design)? So any information if you can remember would be helpful. especially if you remember whether you put the speaker inside the box or not.
@@dobrazmiana796 I made them myself. I used regular speaker wire that I soldered and shrink wrapped to different pieces of wire that already had spade terminals attached.