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Old 06-04-2021, 04:22 PM   #1 (permalink)
scottrc5391
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Join Date: Mar 2021
Location: Lexington
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Default Subwoofer Stealth Fiberglass Enclosures

Hi everyone, this is my first post so I thought I could contribute something I recently did. Below are some pics of my stealth fiberglass enclosure setup which retains the spare tire and doesn't use up any extra trunk space. Nissan did a terrible job making full use of the trunk space, putting those oversized styrofoam things on each corner, one of which holds nothing but a bolt. These boxes fit where those pieces did and I was able to get about 0.62 cubic feet of volume for each one and roughly 5.5" mounting depth, more than enough for 8" subs, and probably enough for many 10" subs (I believe you can fit 10" in each corner instead of 8", and I almost attempted it halfway through when I realized with some measurements that it could work, but I didn't want to cram anything). Given that doing two boxes is twice the work of doing one, if you attempt a similar project you might want to attempt the 10" to save some time/effort/money. I liked the idea of twin 8" as it's kind of unique and after listening to just one 8" installed, I realized I was gonna have more than enough boom and that it was plenty deep. I actually would have been perfectly happy with just one but I went ahead with the second one since I'd already bought everything. This is getting to be a lot of text so I'll just put the pictures now and you can read more details below them if you are interested:







I intentionally selected the lowest frequency range subs I could find, which are Image Dynamics ID8's that were designed with a 22 Hz Fs. They are rated at around 150Wrms each, but in reality have been said to handle well in excess of that. These things are amazing, thundering well into the low 30 Hz range and even into the 20's. I made the boxes bigger than needed (ID says only 0.3 cu ft is required and 0.5 is "large") but I believe this gives them even better low-end extension. Qtc if I remember I calculated at about 0.6, providing quite a flat response that should satisfy most audiophiles. Together they replace a 10" bass tube installed by previous owner which was ported and took up 1/3 of the trunk. They're a bit louder than that ported 10", which is about right since they're being fed together twice the wattage but in sealed boxes. I have a Rockford Fosgate amp running at 600Wrms @ 2 ohms. I stole the amp mounting idea from another member on here who posted his setup some time ago (someone give him a shout out if you remember because I don't). For the grills, I found some "heavy duty" ones (16 gauge I believe) which you could literally stand on if you wanted. I had to weld on some strips of sheet metal and drill holes as they had no flange (be smart and buy ones that have a flange), and then I used 1" aluminum spaces to mount them to the subs using longer screws and the subs own mounting holes. In planning the whole thing I decided it would be best to give the subs some breathing room under the floor/carpet, so I made the boxes about 1" lower than the bottom edge of the outside plastic trim. As you can see, I only had to cut a small arc out of the styrofoam piece on one side. The top of the styrofoam is about flush with the top of the grills, and the cardboard floor piece then sits even with the bottom edge of the trim panels. The amp also gets about an inch of breathing room above it. The end result is a trunk that looks and functions just like a completely stock one. You can throw things around back there without worrying about damaging subs. You can fit the big roll-around checked luggage. Etc. I have some vids on youtube explaining the basics of doing the fiberglass work a little better so you can search for those if you want (same username as here).

Last edited by scottrc5391; 06-04-2021 at 04:27 PM.
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