They sounds like that might be helpful for those trying to listen to speakers while driving?If I'm going on a long drive, I wear high fidelity earplugs made for musicians. 21db of noise reduction with very little reduction in intelligibility.
1000%. Makes a ton of difference. They mainly cut down the engine and wind noise. You can hear your passenger if you are chatting or you can hear your music playing.They sounds like that might be helpful for those trying to listen to speakers while driving?
If I'm going on a long drive, I wear high fidelity earplugs made for musicians. 21db of noise reduction with very little reduction in intelligibility.
Do you have a link or a brand name?1000%. Makes a ton of difference. They mainly cut down the engine and wind noise. You can hear your passenger if you are chatting or you can hear your music playing.
There are motorcycle oriented earplugs that are very similar. I've got 2 brands to try and they do seem to to be decent so far. Fortunately the names are more standard: Alpine Motosafe and NoNoise.Heh... Let the jokes begin...
Thanks!Very crappy. It did work, but was worse quality than the built in speaker of a mid range smart phone. Plenty of volume, but zero fidelity.
So, does the hood fit over that box? This looks great. Did you make a mold? Or is this purely one off craftsmanship?I just recently finished up adding a stereo into my Goblin. Used a NVX Bluetooth receiver as a head unit. I used the footwell cover and built in a fiberglass box for a 10” sub above the passenger foot area, and added 5.25” speakers into the sides of the cover. I 3D printed some pods to protect the back side of the speakers and seal them off more for better mid-bass response. The tweeters were mounted to the top of the cover and face the driver and passenger, so the sound is pretty clear.
I mounted a 2000w marine amp behind the driver seat, and was able to use banana connections to make the cover and speakers removable if needed.
Overall it turned out pretty well, and sounds great for in-town drives. At 55 you can still hear the radio, but it does have to be turned up quite a bit more due to road and wind noise. At highway speed the sound really gets drowned out, and going louder with the stereo is probably not something I’d want to listen to for a multi-hour drive.
Thanks Paul.So, does the hood fit over that box? This looks great. Did you make a mold? Or is this purely one off craftsmanship?