Hello millercarbon,
Very exciting, sounds like you have a good plan. It seems like you're off to a good start with the drivers, amps and enclosures already having been delivered.
I'm glad to assist you as much as I can. However, I think you should know that my main areas of knowledge and experience are as a DBA system room configuration person and user. Unfortunately, I have little knowledge and experience with DIY electronics and speaker projects. I wouldn't describe myself as totally useless in these areas but I'm certainly in that neighborhood. I'd suggest you rely on Duke's or others' advice on these matters. If I do offer advice in these matters, I'll be sure to qualify it with an accurate estimate of my degree of certainty.
Here are a few thoughts I've had thus far:
1. Don't forget the footers, spiked for carpet and something softer for a hard floor. Mine have 3 screw-in spiked footers on each sub that work fine on my carpet. There's no wobble at all with only 3 footers but it's your choice whether you want to use 3 or 4.
2. The Debra subs have the speaker terminals on the bottom of each sub but, according to a photo of your sub enclosure, their terminals are on the back.
Remember, your subs will be positioned facing the nearest wall and just about an inch away from it; this means the back, 2 sides and the top of each sub are the only visible portions. My wife loves this because, if the wood is finished well, these subs look like elegant and stylish wood pedestals like those seen in fine stores and galleries. Any visible speaker terminals and connected wires will ruin this sleek and stylish look. She normally has either a vase of fresh flowers or some other smaller objects she thinks looks good highlighted on these .
.
3. You said the amps (plural) were delivered. How many did you buy and did you purchase the same dedicated Dayton sub amp that comes with the Swarm and Debra?
4. The Morel 10" woofer looks very nice, especially when you get a free sub enclosure with each. The only possible issue I see is that these drivers are 8 ohms while the 10" drivers used in the Swarm and Debra subs are 4 ohms. I believe the class AB Dayton subs double their output wattage as impedance is halved from 8 to 4 ohms, from 500 to about 1,000 watts. This is a good subject for you to discuss with Duke to understand how this could possibly affect performance.
I faintly recall at least one of the subs having dual sets of + and - terminals with the others just having single sets of terminals. I think you should check with Duke on the internal wiring of the subs with dual sets of terminals and how many subs should have dual terminals and how many should have single terminals. I know the subs are wired in series and I'm about 70% sure this affects the actual impedance the amp recognizes. I should be able to find the instruction sheet for my Debra system for relevant details and let you know.
That's about all the topics I thought you should be aware of thus far. If you'd like, I can offer more thoughts as your custom DBA project progresses.
Later,
Tim
Very exciting, sounds like you have a good plan. It seems like you're off to a good start with the drivers, amps and enclosures already having been delivered.
I'm glad to assist you as much as I can. However, I think you should know that my main areas of knowledge and experience are as a DBA system room configuration person and user. Unfortunately, I have little knowledge and experience with DIY electronics and speaker projects. I wouldn't describe myself as totally useless in these areas but I'm certainly in that neighborhood. I'd suggest you rely on Duke's or others' advice on these matters. If I do offer advice in these matters, I'll be sure to qualify it with an accurate estimate of my degree of certainty.
Here are a few thoughts I've had thus far:
1. Don't forget the footers, spiked for carpet and something softer for a hard floor. Mine have 3 screw-in spiked footers on each sub that work fine on my carpet. There's no wobble at all with only 3 footers but it's your choice whether you want to use 3 or 4.
2. The Debra subs have the speaker terminals on the bottom of each sub but, according to a photo of your sub enclosure, their terminals are on the back.
Remember, your subs will be positioned facing the nearest wall and just about an inch away from it; this means the back, 2 sides and the top of each sub are the only visible portions. My wife loves this because, if the wood is finished well, these subs look like elegant and stylish wood pedestals like those seen in fine stores and galleries. Any visible speaker terminals and connected wires will ruin this sleek and stylish look. She normally has either a vase of fresh flowers or some other smaller objects she thinks looks good highlighted on these .
.
3. You said the amps (plural) were delivered. How many did you buy and did you purchase the same dedicated Dayton sub amp that comes with the Swarm and Debra?
4. The Morel 10" woofer looks very nice, especially when you get a free sub enclosure with each. The only possible issue I see is that these drivers are 8 ohms while the 10" drivers used in the Swarm and Debra subs are 4 ohms. I believe the class AB Dayton subs double their output wattage as impedance is halved from 8 to 4 ohms, from 500 to about 1,000 watts. This is a good subject for you to discuss with Duke to understand how this could possibly affect performance.
I faintly recall at least one of the subs having dual sets of + and - terminals with the others just having single sets of terminals. I think you should check with Duke on the internal wiring of the subs with dual sets of terminals and how many subs should have dual terminals and how many should have single terminals. I know the subs are wired in series and I'm about 70% sure this affects the actual impedance the amp recognizes. I should be able to find the instruction sheet for my Debra system for relevant details and let you know.
That's about all the topics I thought you should be aware of thus far. If you'd like, I can offer more thoughts as your custom DBA project progresses.
Later,
Tim