Hi all,
last week I did the blasphemy to put a tiny sub (6 1/2 inches woofer) atop of a furniture. This is not any normal furniture. It has been built to be very sturdy based on this guide
and also it isscrewed to the wall.
We have also used a vibrometer and we almost got not any vibrations when we have been hitting the surface. A big table was way too more shaky when tested with vibrometer.
Still I want to learn what is the type of measurement that can check that there is any resonance from that surface. I am sure that people have tried to measureme similar things from wooden floors, thin walls etc. Can you give me such a guide that I can follow?
Regards,
Alex
last week I did the blasphemy to put a tiny sub (6 1/2 inches woofer) atop of a furniture. This is not any normal furniture. It has been built to be very sturdy based on this guide
The Cabinet & the Subwoofer
I’m in the interesting position of telling you how to do something with a subwoofer that you shouldn’t do. No, it’s not illegal. But in the ears of those for whom sound quality is more important than ergonomics, décor, and/or domestic tranquility, it’s definitely heretical. So let me say at the...
www.soundandvision.com
We have also used a vibrometer and we almost got not any vibrations when we have been hitting the surface. A big table was way too more shaky when tested with vibrometer.
Still I want to learn what is the type of measurement that can check that there is any resonance from that surface. I am sure that people have tried to measureme similar things from wooden floors, thin walls etc. Can you give me such a guide that I can follow?
Regards,
Alex