Just wanted to know what you do with all your "extra" speakers every time you build a new project. Speaker building can be very addictive (I speak as a recovering addict) and you end up with more speakers than anybody on the block. I've never had much luck ever selling them, most people who are willing to buy high end speakers want something commercially made.
What to do with all these speakers.
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
-
Tags: None
- Bottom
-
Excellent question! I've only been at this a year or two and I'm already wondering the same thing.- Bottom
-
IB subwoofer FAQ page
"Complicated equipment and light reflectors and various other items of hardware are enough, to my mind, to prevent the birdie from coming out." ...... Henri Cartier-Bresson- Bottom
Comment
-
Originally posted by servicetechJust wanted to know what you do with all your "extra" speakers every time you build a new project. Speaker building can be very addictive (I speak as a recovering addict) and you end up with more speakers than anybody on the block. I've never had much luck ever selling them, most people who are willing to buy high end speakers want something commercially made.
Give away if you can afford it, esp to those who about to start a new home, or students or your children.
or
dismantle them, sell drivers on Ebay and reuse cabinet or use as firewood if these are not good enough in your opinion.
or
stereo pair sold through Ebay with no minimun, eventually they find a good home.
cheers.- Bottom
Comment
-
Originally posted by ThomasW
I did however build a much larger home and separate garage, giving me much more room for the speakers I have. This may not be the most economical route to deal with extra speakers. :B- Bottom
Comment
-
Originally posted by ttan98I am in the same situation, these are a few suggestions:
Give away if you can afford it, esp to those who about to start a new home, or students or your children.
or
dismantle them, sell drivers on Ebay and reuse cabinet or use as firewood if these are not good enough in your opinion.
or
stereo pair sold through Ebay with no minimun, eventually they find a good home.
cheers.
MDF, particle and/or press-board and adhesives are by far the worse possible thing you can set on fire, especially in your home fireplace.
Sorry there bud, but when you're wrong, you're wrong and someone has to look out for the truly stupid.- Bottom
Comment
-
Originally posted by Paul HThere was some good advice in that thread but I never did get rid of any speakers I've built.
IB subwoofer FAQ page
"Complicated equipment and light reflectors and various other items of hardware are enough, to my mind, to prevent the birdie from coming out." ...... Henri Cartier-Bresson- Bottom
Comment
-
I put a pair on audiogon and had luck selling them there. I had a ton of reponse, and even had people that wanted me to ship them. I ended up with a local sale though.
I think the trick is to sell projects that have nice woodwork. People don't want to buy someone elses experiment. So if the cabinet is finished and up to the standards of some commercially available stuff, you should be able to move it.
Parting it out seems like a waste of money as you will end up with substantially less money than you started with. But, it is a hobby.- Bottom
Comment
-
I have recycled previously used drivers into new projects, perhaps into a new type of application. Say to have a pair of RS180 2ways that you could add a couple RS180's to and a couple mids and make a WWMT. Unless the drivers are out of date, it is hard to beat the price of reuse rather than buying new. I've even recycled crossover parts the same way.Dan N.- Bottom
Comment
-
It's just that there's a nasty formaldehyde based resin in it to bind it together...-Tyler
Under deadline pressure for the next week. If you want something, it can wait. Unless it's blind screaming paroxysmally hedonistic...- Bottom
Comment
-
Originally posted by GirA lot of MDF is made with other resins nowadays since there was a lot of controversy about the formaldehyde. Probably still isn't good to burn it anyway. Whatever resin is used, it probably wouldn't be good to inhale 8O- Bottom
Comment
-
I don't know about you, but if I cut or rout the stuff without wearing a mask, I find myself short of breath. Something tells me that means it's not good for me.
Back on track though, I'm very interested in what people do with their speakers. I imagine that once I have a bit more money I'll quickly run into this problem!-Tyler
Under deadline pressure for the next week. If you want something, it can wait. Unless it's blind screaming paroxysmally hedonistic...- Bottom
Comment
-
In the past I have been able to sell some of the lower end speakers for the cost of the drivers/crossovers. I've never built a set of speakers that cost more than $200 in drivers/crossovers, I've always used speaker building as a way to avoid the high cost of commercial speakers. I grew up in a day when parents didn't buy their teenage kids anything they wanted. One day I might break down and make a set that's in the $500 range, but for right now raising family takes most of the budget.- Bottom
Comment
-
I say just load them up in a white van and drive around offer to sell them to people. I'm told that works.- Bottom
Comment
-
I keep one pair as my garage speakers, one pair as my mains 95% of the time, I rotate various speakers for my center and rear surrounds, as well as for my 2.1 system in another room. The rest go into my neatly layed out closet (where I store "bonus" drivers). I am trying to re-use my cabinets, whether it is coincidental driver cutouts (or easily modified), making new baffles, or both. I keep the crossovers external.
Everyone I know doesn't want any speakers, even when they look good.- Bottom
Comment
Comment