skolbrother #1, I nominate you into the AHOF (Audiogon Hall Of Fame). This is truly an original post. If you can, please provide before/after pictures. And I would suggest not drinking too much before starting.
Shrink Totem 1's?
Hello
New here. I have a pair of Totem 1's which have been in storage for a few years, in order to get them to fit on my bookshelf I plan to cut them with table saw and take about 4" of depth away. These are rears and space is limited. I have low expectations on the outcome but I'll keep this post updated as what materializes with this project. PS these are about 5/10 condition so not too worried about the outcome. Also fronts and center are all Totem (in better condition). Wish me luck. Thanks
https://cdn.imgpile.com/f/ZtBSwa1_xl.jpg https://cdn.imgpile.com/f/kTJJORH_xl.jpg Pics of one of my Totems |
Post removed |
Are you out of mind? Sorry to use that wording but chopping 4" in depth will turn the 9" sealed box to a semi-open baffled speaker, completely ruin the structure, design and sound of the speaker. Consider donating them to a caring / loving home / owner please. I will be more than happy to take care of them. |
Could you possibly cut out the material in the shelf and/or wall so that the existing speaker enclosure could fit inside the cavity that results from said modification? This way, the strategic design of the speaker enclosure could perform its job as originally intended and you may be able to achieve an acceptable fit. there will likely be 3.5” of space between the inside dimension of the wall and at least 1/2” or more of wall thickness, which would give you the 4” that you are looking for. That’s what I would do. |
Don’t know why you guys are jumping all over him. He’s established they’re old, beat up and expendable. I say go for it! The odds of a positive outcome are the same as zero, but if this in fact a legitimate thread, I personally look forward to reading the inevitable outcome. Like a slow motion train wreck, except no one gets hurt. @highendhound , if you're serious, that's more ridiculous than what he's gonna do. |
@devinplombier , 😆 |
@skolbrother I recommend cutting the front of the speakers off. If you cut the back the speakers will not have binding posts anymore and you will not be able to connect them. |
@grislybutter , either one. It can only improve the looks of that crazy thing. |
@thecarpathian @audphile1 given that we still don't know what it is (what is on picture #1) we don't know if it can look better
|
Listen, anyone who’s gonna ruin perfectly good speakers by going through the trouble of sawing them in half, and somehow re-attaching the back and connectors instead of simply getting a bigger shelf is a trailblazer, a pioneer! @skolbrother , way to think outside the box, or the half box, or whatever. |
Oh wow thanks for the great responses. I'm totally rethinking this project. The JBL Classic l52 fit the space opting for the orange covers. Just can't see myself removing the covers while listening to them. These seem a little over priced but could work, any opinions on them? A few pairs on the net now for sale already broken in. If I go this route I'd want fronts to match.. My mighty Totems might end up in the basement listening room untouched. Decisions decisions.. |
I had Totem Model One Signatures, Center, and the standard Model Ones for rear channel with alloy tweeters vs soft domes, and used them for a decade. They are not good for this. They are designed for 2ch audio, inefficient, and dont radiate as well as purpose built units for this. There are other options better suited for rears. |
also @yogiboy I meant no hard-balling about 2 or 3 ways, I don't know much about speaker design. |
@thecarpathian very true! my bad |
https://cdn.imgpile.com/f/WaQ8yXc_xl.jpg The front of listening area almost done. Cutting out the wall to accommodate the speakers cannot be done it's exterior wall and it's 2 degrees outside currently. I wish I could do it though. |