You could have used both channels, one for the woofer, other for the mid and tweeter, and used a jumper on the signal from both channels so they receive the same input. This way you would have more output :)
Please made portable Hig Voltage (400V) powerful shaking vibrating subwoofer - Sub + passive subwoofer powerful vibro plummet, tweet, squeaker... (subwoofer power 1000W /RMS, summary power 1500-2000W)... Can you do both from the amplifier taramps? or convert a wireless subwoofer to a portable + speaker + squeaker? - DC-DC increase battery voltage to high voltage to increase power to power a powerful high-voltage subwoofer amplifier???
@@Arturikas17 Sure BUT ........... Was testing mentioned? What tests and how to test properly? What equipment is needed? How to evaluate the test results? Most clowns posting such content just measure cell/battery voltage - unloaded! and just as a singular point!!
Well I believe the people who decide to do project like that, must have such a knowledge. The least what they have is common sense. Also just from video only you cant tell how to actualy build the pack so someone who has no idea what they doing I'm preety sure they would research on how to build battery packs. As there are so much content creators who are specifically making content on batteries. That's what I did anyways and I have no idea about electronics at all. My speaker turned out just fine.
@@Arturikas17 Most people are dumber than a pile of rocks (to be polite). Just yesterday a guy was asking on another site what is the mAH of a freaking transformer! And I saw one channel the other day where the host merely twisted the electrical wires together (and then used heat-shrink tubing). Last month I saw a carpenter using NAILS to affix the hinges to a door. There are some forums I am a member of and the questions can be extremely naive. At the very least Electronoobs (the name captures the target market) should have indicated testing was necessary and linked it appropriate content.
Maybe I missed but I didn't see a cross-over anywhere here or in the links? The wiring diagram shows the speakers in parallel - which if they were 4 Ohm could cause problems. It seems you do NOT really know audio systems. Maybe stick with digital stuff.
I like your projects. Just one question, How long does the speaker run on batteries? I also want to make a speaker but I want it to charge directly of a 220v supply. So the transformer and converter will have to go inside the unit.
I would suggest to make a connection for the other channel at the outside of the speaker. This way you could connect the other speaker for more power 😄
"I've desoldered the potentiometer the amplifier had and solder it back in the same way but using long thin wires." NOT SHIELDED CABLE? is that a good idea? I think NOT.
Another great project, and something I’d be interested in trying. Could you explain how the crossover between speakers is handled? In the bench test you only showed connection to the woofer. How is the mid and tweeter connected? Thanks again for a cool project!