boosted_brick, on 12 November 2011 - 01:28 AM, said:
do you have a photo of the sub in its enclosure? i wasnt aware there was this option out there. i bet you could just find a 12" sub with the same size dimensions and drop it right in there. maybe a bigger amp would be needed, who knows... i was going to do this with my last car. i found a factory enclosure and was about to swap the sub out but ford probes arent really baby friendly.
Not at the moment, but pictures are out there of the box itself. The way it's setup is as a free- or open-air venting, so the magnet is outside of the box with a metal protective basket around it, with an amp built into the enclosure but not sealed in the box.
I wanted to find another 12" sub (like you said), and drop it in but it looks like this was addressed in the second bit here \/ \/ \/ (what scumcity14 got at..)
as for the amp bit, yeah a new one would be needed...it looks like it would be way easier to make a box built for a sub and wire it separately but use the mounting hardware.
scumcity14, on 12 November 2011 - 02:39 AM, said:
A driver of the "same dimensions" doesn't necessarily mean it will work well in the factory enclosure. An enclosure and its volume (not loudness, physical volume) is designed around the particular driver that is in it..you don't just build a box and slap a 12" speaker in a 12" hole and bam..accurate tight bass. Port diameter and length needs to be calculated as well (if its even a driver for a ported enclosure), you can't just stick a tube or 2 in and have more bass. It will most likely be very boomy around one narrow frequency range and some of the the others will be cancelled..
exactly. and to clarify my other post, I was referring to the amp for the speakers in the rest of the car.
1981 242ti, batch.