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Cellular Phone Ampitheatre (need help boosting low-end)
Well as many of you probably know, most smart phones have their speaker on the back. In order to get the volume from your phone, the speaker is designed in a way that you're to lay it on a flat surface.
Now who wants to lay their phone flat and lean over it to watch a video? I damn sure don't. So I made an amphitheatre for it. It is actually a bit louder than just laying it flat on the desk and I took a while to refine the curvature of the shell for this. Now it's louder than flat on the table and louder without the ringing of placing it in a regular bowl. Basically I created a Styrofoam core that I covered in plaster and left it rough and before fully drying, I added a layer of Hydrocal over the top of that (paster with Portland cement), sanded smooth and then sealed with polycrylic. One issue I do have though is that, while it works great, some of the sound fidelity is lost, particularly low-end frequencies. I think that the Styrofoam core is absorbing the lower ones so they're not reflecting off the plaster the way all the mids and highs do, but I'm not sure. I know a decent amount about sound engineering, but not nearly enough. Is there any way I can regain some of that low end? The Theatre: http://www.impetus-aesthetica.com/amphitheatre.png |
That's a really interesting idea...I know a lot of people put their phones in bowls or large coffee cups to amplify the sound, but I like your idea too.
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That and I had exra plaster and was bored. XD. I might make a tutorial when I perfect the design. Sent from my SCH-S720C using Tapatalk 2 |
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