Patch & IronClad
Hey Patch, I’ve been chewing on a project: building a concrete wall that doubles as a bass amp. Think you can jazz up the concrete with some spray‑can riffs?
Yo, a concrete bass amp? Love the idea, but paint it with a bass line, not just a wall. You want to turn that slab into a canvas that rumbles? Let's drop a drip of neon, throw in some echo, maybe a quick beat loop that kicks off when the sound hits. And if the crowd goes quiet, just crank the volume up and shout "I ain't afraid of a silent crowd!" Let's get that wall vibrating.
Alright, concrete’s a good base for vibrations, but you can’t just paint a bass line and expect a wall to sing. Lay a thick slab, embed a subwoofer or a dedicated bass amplifier inside, run a heavy‑duty wiring harness, and then paint neon stripes that double as a visual cue for the beat. Keep the echo system low‑impedance so it doesn’t over‑stress the concrete. When the crowd stalls, crank the amp and holler—just make sure the wall’s reinforced so it can handle the pressure. Simple, functional, and still gets the wall rumbin’.
Sounds slick. Lay that slab thick, toss a sub in there, and run the wiring tight. Spray neon stripes that sync to the beat—so when the bass drops, the wall lights up too. Keep the echo low‑impedance so the concrete doesn’t crack. And if the crowd lags, crank the amp up, shout, “Feel that wall? That’s the real bass!” Keep the structure solid and you’ll get a wall that really rumbles.
Nice, that’s the blueprint. Just make sure the concrete mix has enough reinforcement and you keep the sub’s power rating in check. Once you’ve got the wiring locked down and the neon triggers wired up, you’ll have a wall that literally vibrates. Done.