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30 minutes ago, srp365 said:

bf84d973fbac1338800c7793d9d7cce481275ccc5365a4bd45815409426def20_1.jpg

I shit you not there are people who actually think like that

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On 4/17/2017 at 0:46 PM, rocking.that.eclipse said:

When you're tired of screwing into wood on your box you make these....

 

Studs that go through baskets and this will bolt through baffle. Perks of working with CAD every day and having access to CNCs at work

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a hand full of t-nuts would accomplish the same goal for maybe 1% of the cost....  not to mention the huge waist of material and machine time-

 

or am I missing something? 

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2 minutes ago, never knows best said:

a hand full of t-nuts would accomplish the same goal for maybe 1% of the cost....  not to mention the huge waist of material and machine time-

 

or am I missing something? 

That mounts outside of the box, and not inside like you might be thinking of.

When i was into model aircraft i would use aircraft grade plywood laminated to 1/2" thick and would drill a pilot hole and run a screw through it and then use thin CA glue on the threads to act like they were metal after the application, the pieces were usually 1" x 2" CA glued to the bottom of the baffle, very effective and never had one strip.

01 Ford focus ZX3

Pioneer AVH-X491BHS

PPI PC 4800.2

Morel Maximo 6.5" x2

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T-Nuts have been known to rip out and then you have a sub hung up on 1-8 bolts depending on how many ripped out. Not the worst deal if you have access to the back from another sub cutout, but if you only have one sub per chamber there's not a lot of options to how to fix it.

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49 minutes ago, audiofanaticz said:

Because usually when people have things machined it is usually aluminum or some other soft metal and not steel.

If you didnt want people to assume, you should of said otherwise....

Touche lol

 

Yeah steel for strength of studs. I couldn't find a good way to machine out of aluminum and attach the studs

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