Samsung DA-E670 Audio Dock Wall Mount

Samsung DA-E670 Audio Dock Wall Mount

Description

So I just bought a house and I have this Samsung DA-E670 Audio Dock that I have had for literally years, and I wanted to mount it outside in my entertaining area, however I didn't want just a shelf, plain old boring shelves are just that, plain old boring shelves. So I decided to fire up the CAD, take some measurements from the dock, and et voila, here we go! A Wall mount to suit the Samsung DA-E670 Audio Dock! I created the file identical on both sides, this saves you having to waste material where none is needed to be wasted, and allows some area for the subwoofer (Sick mate, Sick, Subwoofer) to blast it's bassy tunes out the bottom. She's designed to be installed into brickwork using RAMSET DP10050 or DP10075 Dynabolts, though you could use DP10100 or DP10125 if you really want to get it deep into the brickwork, though as the unit only weighs in at 4.1kg, there's really no need to go so hardcore, you'll have 8 damn bolts holding it in the wall. I was thinking to put a decorative lip on her, however I decided that was overkill, considering the factory feet are intended to slot into the holes already on the mount, this should provide more than ample security for the unit to remain in place. The feet are 30mm large at their widest point (Where they meet the base of the unit), so I have made the holes exactly 30mm wide, your printer may not be able to print with such tolerance, however a tight fit is a good fit in this design, will help to keep a music unit steady when the tunes are cranking hardcore at your BBQ! Might just need to file them out a tad. According to Fusion 360's Simulator, she should be rated to around 9kg, which is more than double the units weight per base, I factored this in due to the possibility of music being cranked, a slight breeze, if the house shakes, etc, but make sure you are getting good layer adhesion! The last thing you want is a crack to develop, go unnoticed and then you're cranking out the good stuff and suddenly with a pop, bang, and boom, your stereo falls off the wall and now is a pile of scrap electronics on your floor. Wdit: Added some speed holes to save the amount of material needed in printing, really cutting down on the weight.

Statistics

Likes

11

Downloads

0

Category

Electronics