From Nissan 350Z & 370Z Wiki
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- How do I mount the enclosure once i'm done building
it?
- The best way, in my opinion, to mount any box is to bolt it to
your car. Now not everyone likes drilling / bolting into their car
so I will provide an alternative. As far as bolting goes, simply
put the box where you want it -- remove the subwoofer, and through
the subwoofer hole, drill through the enclosure as well as through
the car. Then use a metal bolt and bolt it down, apply a bead of
silicone if you are worried about air leakage. It might be a good
idea if you have your fiberglass box right up against a metal part
of a car to apply some sound deadening material between the
fiberglass and the metal -- Otherwise its likely itll vibrate and
make lots of noise. If its up against carpet you dont need to worry
about this. Now, if you dont want to bolt, you can use hook and
loop tape. Not the regular fabric velcro, the heavy duty plastic
hook and loop stuff -- Its self adhesive, so apply to your car
body, and to your box. Since the box was conformed to that space in
the first place, it doesn't take a whole lot to keep it still -- it
will just sit there. Always mount your box, its not a good idea to
have a huge heavy peice of metal just chilling there, especially if
you get into an accident, that shit could fly around.
- Where can I get these supplies?
- Fiberglass and Resin: Available at home improvement
stores (Home Depot / Lowes), even Walmart carries it. But these are
usually small quantities and overpriced. You can get much better
deals from boating stores. Look for a local boating shop, or visit
http://westmarine.com
and look for a local dealer. For a gallon of resin with hardener
you should be paying <$20.
- Fiberglass Roller: You can use small metal paint
rollers, and soak in acetone between coats, or there are many
online retailers selling it cheaply. I've seen rollers in a few
boat stores as well.
- Body Filler / Glazing Putty: Bondo is available
everywhere (Auto parts stores, Walmart) but is not as good as some
other stuff. Rage Gold or Evercoat are better choices but might be
harder to find. A body shop will definitely carry these. You can of
course find these materials online but alot of the time these are
heavy and shipping costs will kill you, or depending on the
product, sometimes you need to pay extra for 'hazardous' shipping,
so try to find it locally.
- Carpetting / Grill Cloth: I always buy from
partsexpress.com. I havent been able to find a local dealer with
decent stuff.
- Fleece / Fabric: Ragshop or Joanne's fabric or Walmart.
Look for polyester/cotton or polyester. Not too thick. Dark colors
better. Lower price better. Must be stretchy in all
directions.
- High build primer: Automotive body paint shops
- I want to fiberglass to plastic, how do I do this?
- Incase you didnt know, fiberglass does _not_ stick to plastic.
If you glass to plastic, it will fall off once it dries. The only
real way around this is to scuff up the plastic (sand with low grit
sand paper), then drill a bunch of small holes through the plastic.
you then have to glass on both sides of the plastic, making sure
resin soaks through the holes and will hold it together. In most
cases when you are dealing with plastic (i.e. installing TV in
dash, making your own HU mount), you can use plastic weld and cut
pieces of ABS plastic. Cut the plastic framing / ABS to your
desired shape. Use plastic weld to glue all the plastic together.
Then bondo the creases, sand, primer, paint. If you do not know
what plastic weld is, you need to get something like Duramix 4040
- My resin gel'd, What do I do?
- If it's gel'd up, it's useless. Try to remove any from your
structure before it fully hardens -- you dont want pockets of resin
only. Resin will gel up when you have applied too much hardener.
Remember you only need several drops per oz's of resin, and dont
forget to take into account the temperature of air. Manufacturer
recommendations are for 70F, if its warmer add a littler less, if
its colder add a littler more. Also, brands differ to, if you buy
different stuff read the labels.
- My box won't harden, What do i do?
- Too little hardener or its too cold outside. You can try adding
heating lamps or a blow dryer to speed up the process. If it does
not dry (or get tacky to the touch) within 10 hours you can try to
add a hotbatch. That is, mix up a new batch of resin and put in
2-3x the recommended hardener and apply it immediately, hopefully
this will harden the layer underneath.
- My box rattles against my car.
- Apply sound deadening between the box and your car -- You can
use some carpetting, dynamatt, brown bread etc. A cheap alterantive
is self-adhesive roofing asphalt found in Home Depot in the roofing
aisle. Its aluminum foiling with sticky tar on one side (almost
identical to Dynamatt, but much much cheaper).
- How do I wire up the subs?
- If you want to use terminal cups, you will need to make a
wooden base for them to screw into, and glass that into place.
However, in my experience terminal cups usually leak. I usually
just drill a small hole for the wires to pass through. Tie a knot
on the outside so that the wire will not fall into the box. Apply a
bead of silicone around the edge (on the inside) to ensure its air
tight.
- How do I calculate the volume of the box?
- The majority of fiberglass installs are in sealed boxes. This
is because ported / bandpass / TL boxes are very very dependant on
box size for proper tuning. In a sealed box you can be off on
volume by as much as 20% and not hear any audible difference. So
usually, you can just guestimate the size of the box. If you are
picky, always try to make the box as large as possible. Once you
have it completed, you can fill the box with sand / water /
packaging peanuts. Then empty that stuff into something of known
volume (shoe box, milk jug) and add it up that way. That will give
you your exact internal volume. If your volume is too big for what
you like, add some mass inside (2x4 chunks glued down). If its too
small, you can add some acoustic stuffing on the inside to try to
accont for a smaller box. If it still sounds bad, you can cut off
some of the box and add to it -- simply glass more, a new glass
peice will adhere to the old no problem.
- Fleece covered in resin is pretty strong, do I really need to
use fiberglass to?
- Absolutely, the resin is kinda like glue that is all. By itself
its not very strong, and very brittle. It also likely will not be
airtight. You have to use fiberglass or carbon fiber. The purpose
of the fleece is only to create the shape, it does not give any
strength.
- What else can I use to get shape besides pulling
fabric?
- I've seen people use chicken wire and apply weave directly over
that, or you can use two-part expanding foam and carve out the
desired shape, then fleece and glass (this is used alot for custom
doors / door pods).
- How can I check to make sure its airtight?
- If you put enough layers on you should not even worry about
this, but you can always check by filling with water. There should
be no leaks.
- Can I use carbon fiber in the same process? Can I lay carbon
fiber over fiberglass?
- The process for laying carbon fiber and fiberglass is exactly
the same. Carbon fiber is more expensive than fiberglass, but it is
stronger. Most people now use carbon fiber simply for looks, so if
you want to make you box look nice, i would suggest making it out
of fiberglass or wood, then lay just one layer of carbon fiber on
top. Carbon fiber comes in weave matts. If you've ever used a weave
matt of fiberglass you know that it comes apart fairly easily. With
carbin fiber as your finished layer, if you have any holes in the
weave it will show through. As you can imagine, this will be easy
to lay on long straight runs, but as you hit curves, it'll become
more difficult. I would suggest practicing with some fiberglass
weave matt before using CF (since it is so expensive). If you can
get the glass weave to look right, go ahead and try with CF. A link
related to carbon fiber laying can be found here. You can use regular polyester resin, but most
people I see doing CF work use epoxy resin. You can find
information on different types of resin'shere and that website also is a large source of
carbin fiber matts.
- I'm confused as to how fiberglass gets attached to wood by
simply laying the two together. Do I need to screw them
together?
- No. Wood is actually very porous, and when you lay fiberglas
over wood, the resin will seep into the wood. When it dries it
creates a very strong bond and you do not need to use any glue or
screws to hold the two together.
- I have a question about how to wire up fans and
relays.
- Please check out http://the12volt.com/ there is tons of information
about basic electrical wire, specifically for cars.
- I want to fiberglass over my dashboard / door panel. What
process do I use?
- Unless you are completely rebuilding the shape and/or style of
your dashboard or door panel, you do not need to use fiberglass. In
most cases you can simply use body filler and proceed with the
normal painting procedure in order to get a shiny high gloss
painted finish. Depending on the surface type, you may need to use
a combination of plastic putties or adhesion promoters. Every car
plastic is different so it would be a good idea to do a test patch
before you do the entire process. However in most cases, body
filler has no problem sticking to plastic.