Dodecahedron Speaker Delivers Almost Spherical Sound

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Dodecahedron Speaker Delivers Almost Spherical Sound

Sean Ragan created this fantastic dodecahedron speaker, which not only looks good, but also has some interesting acoustic properties:

At normal listening distances, an array of twelve speakers arranged on the faces of a dodecahedron is a very good approximation of a point sound source, and the sound waves it produces are very close to perfectly spherical. A dodecahedron speaker can be a useful tool in acoustics research, and is definitely a fun toy to pull out at parties. They are available commercially, but very expensive. Some people build their own, but the odd compound angles and the high degree of accuracy and precision required in the parts make for challenging work with manual tools. But it’s easy for a 3D printer.

If you have your own 3D printer to make some of the components, this beautiful speaker can be built for just under $100 in parts and materials. Sean wrote a full guide to building it and he even shared all of the design files on Thingiverse.

5 thoughts on “Dodecahedron Speaker Delivers Almost Spherical Sound

  1. Michaelc says:

    In a 70’s design book called “nomadic furniture” they had a design for something nearly identical made of cardboard and smaller speakers.

    1. Sean Ragan says:

      Hi Michael! That is *exactly* where this idea came from. I’ve been obsessing about how to build one of those since I first read Nomadic Furniture more than a decade ago. The prototype in the book was built from cardboard and then covered in fiberglass, but I wanted to build one that could be taken apart and repaired or modified, if necessary. Good eye!

  2. Karl becker says:

    I would very much like to read this book.

  3. MAKE | Top Ten Dorm Room Hacks says:

    […] Dodecahedron Speaker Delivers Almost Spherical Sound […]

  4. Futuristic Hands-Free Game Control with the DodecaLEDron - Make: | Make: says:

    […] Dodecaudion, markcra’s dodecahedron and another project Makezine covered called the dodecahedron speaker. For more information about the custom controller, visit the project page linked at the top. Also, […]

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Matt Richardson is a San Francisco-based creative technologist and Contributing Editor at MAKE. He’s the co-author of Getting Started with Raspberry Pi and the author of Getting Started with BeagleBone.

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