Crazy idea time. I'm stealing this from a post at the PE Forum by Spasticteapot. He wondered about using steel tube for enclosures. I'm not sure if he did anything with it, because he had problems getting tube steel. I'm a structural engineer - I don't have problems getting tube steel. So, today I picked up a kick back from a contractor.
Here in my possession is two pieces of structural tube steel. The pieces are 16"x8"x1/2"-12"long. My math shows that to be approximately a 20L enclosure.
My plan is to epoxy a front and rear baffle on the tube (likely front removable). Line the inside with maybe some roofing membrane and Sonic Barrier and there you go. I'm thinking it is going to be a pretty stiff and non-resonant box. It might ring with the knuckle test, but it should take a lot of energy to move 1/2" thick steel. Only 75# per tube.
CJD raised a concern about the thick tub steel causing induction problems with the drivers, so I pulled an UNsheilded RS180 out of my In-Khan and tested the impedance in and out of the enclosure. I ran 4 impedance sweeps with my WT3 (yeah Thomas is right, lots of problems...another thread). Two sweeps in, two sweeps out of the tube. The steel tube doesn't seem to affect the driver impedance - the peek got a little higher, but the overall shape the same (could just be the WT3). There might also be problems with the crossover inductors, but I'm can put them in the bottom of the speaker stands. So I think I'm in the clear.
Zaph's ZA MTM seems to fit well enough inside. So, what am I missing? Should be a fun experiment. Or, is it just a bad idea?



Here in my possession is two pieces of structural tube steel. The pieces are 16"x8"x1/2"-12"long. My math shows that to be approximately a 20L enclosure.My plan is to epoxy a front and rear baffle on the tube (likely front removable). Line the inside with maybe some roofing membrane and Sonic Barrier and there you go. I'm thinking it is going to be a pretty stiff and non-resonant box. It might ring with the knuckle test, but it should take a lot of energy to move 1/2" thick steel. Only 75# per tube.
CJD raised a concern about the thick tub steel causing induction problems with the drivers, so I pulled an UNsheilded RS180 out of my In-Khan and tested the impedance in and out of the enclosure. I ran 4 impedance sweeps with my WT3 (yeah Thomas is right, lots of problems...another thread). Two sweeps in, two sweeps out of the tube. The steel tube doesn't seem to affect the driver impedance - the peek got a little higher, but the overall shape the same (could just be the WT3). There might also be problems with the crossover inductors, but I'm can put them in the bottom of the speaker stands. So I think I'm in the clear.
Zaph's ZA MTM seems to fit well enough inside. So, what am I missing? Should be a fun experiment. Or, is it just a bad idea?

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