Urban75 Home About Offline BrixtonBuzz Contact

Making a portable sound system

fractionMan

Custom Title
Any advice on the best way to do it? I'm busy collecting the bits right now.

I'm bidding on a couple of 10" powered speakers and keeping my eye out for an old pram or trolley to stick them in. I can use a couple of my boat batteries to power it. The only other thing I need is an inverter.

So, anyone done this. Pros/cons of various approaches?
 
No need for an invertor, surely? The powerd speakers will be running DC internally, so just bypass the transformer
For my money, I'd rather go with normal speakers and a T-amp, which takes 12V DC straight from the batteries
 
You can use inverters or bypass the transformers in an old amp so the battery powers it directly...
 
Er, yeah, like Crispy says.

The guitar practice amps are good for trolley/lead acid battery work.

Inverters take much juice to run, shortens battery life...
 
Good idea bypassing the transformers, I'll do it if I can.

I did consider going down the class T + passives route but it seemed like a bit of a faff. For a start, I'd need a bunch of class T amps to get any volume. The largest around is about 25w iirc. Plus extra wiring etc. It'd be nice just to be able to plug them in when they're at home.
 
Good idea bypassing the transformers, I'll do it if I can.

I did consider going down the class T + passives route but it seemed like a bit of a faff. For a start, I'd need a bunch of class T amps to get any volume. The largest around is about 25w iirc. Plus extra wiring etc. It'd be nice just to be able to plug them in when they're at home.

Ah, well it does depend how much power you want to draw, yes :)

But T-class amps are the front-runners for efficiency whilst still sounding good. Didn't think they got that expensive that quickly though :-/
 
Ah, well it does depend how much power you want to draw, yes :)

But T-class amps are the front-runners for efficiency whilst still sounding good. Didn't think they got that expensive that quickly though :-/

The little ones are about 40 quid at the mo. I've got one for home use and it's :cool:

The speakers I'm looking at are 90w each.
 
Yes I remember the thread :) - which is why I was :confused: about your OP!

Is it possible to run each channel through both channels of the cheap ones, thus doubling your power?
 
Yeah, but you still end up with 40w per amp - I'd need 4 of them for the same power.

I guess I'm thinking easy + simple == good here.

I'm trying to find out more about the db technologies basic 100 speakers to see what kind of amp they've got, but no luck so far.
 
180W is quite a load, and will need quite a lot of battery for a useful running time! I think we must be thinking of different definitions of "portable" :D
 
lol, yeah. I'm planning on having 1, maybe 2 115ah batteries to power it. Or the genny :D

Any trolley recommendations?

This looks good: http://www.selections.com/GF7749/ga...iate&utm_source=webgains&utm_medium=affiliate

Pnumatic tyres, 18 quid and it works both ways:

GF7749.jpg


GF7749.jpg
 
I made mine using a 500W amp designed for a car, hence 12V electrics.

Couple of large car batteries wired in parallel, hook up a couple of big speakers, plug an ipod into the amp and off you go.
 
I made mine using a 500W amp designed for a car, hence 12V electrics.

Couple of large car batteries wired in parallel, hook up a couple of big speakers, plug an ipod into the amp and off you go.

What do you move it around on? Are they car speakers mounted on something or readymade cabs?
 
i currently have the wood cut for half a davey t booty bassbin + appropriate 15" bass driver, a beyma 1" compression driver and horn, a soundlab 30wpc car amp and a boss 12v active crossover...

need another amp for bass, a mid driver to run ~200Hz-2-3kHz (thinking announcement horn) and workshop time for the build...
 
Back
Top Bottom