At Extreme Audio, we’ve always wanted a way to demo a full-blown Wakeboarding Boat stereo system, but didn’t have the boat to do so. We decided to do the next best thing and built an insane EZ GO golf cart! This thing is the real deal, and shows off some of the custom fiberglass work and custom lighting that we can do. To say that this golf cart audio “upgrade” throws down is a HUGE understatement! We started with a custom wakeboarding tower made by our friends at Moubray Co. in Kilmarnock. We added 4 Wet Sounds REV10 tower speakers, and a LED light bar from Rogue LED lighting. Six 12″ Alpine subwoofers were installed underneath the cart, and over 3000 watts of Wet Sounds amplifiers were molded into the rear. Top that off with a custom fiberglass dash, edge lit plexiglass LED lighting, and a slew of Stinger batteries and it’s ready to rock for hours on end. Swing by the shop to check it out in person, and be sure to keep your eyes open for it around town in parades and other events!
At Extreme Audio, we are up for almost any challenge! To learn more about great add ons for your vehicle (any vehicle!), give us a call, stop in or Contact Us.
7451 Sujen Ct, Mechanicsville, VA 23111
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This is cool but why would you need that much sound?? I dig the lights on it though.
It was actually designed to be a representation of the audio system for a Wakeboarding boat, without the boat! Also as a demo for some of the custom fiberglass work that we’re capable of.
what speakers did you use on front?
Those are the Wet Sounds xs-650-s-rgb. 6 1/2″ with the RGB lighting already in them. Thanks!
What would something like this cost? If my cart has 4 seats can you work around that.
I would want as much sound as we could put in, as we are an entertainment golf event company so we would use this on the golf course.
Mike, This particular build was in the neighborhood of $30k with all the one-off custom work. Ironically we JUST sold this to one of our local clients.
What did you use for a power supply? We’re installing a system on a golf cart and it will require more than the 30 amps most voltage reducers will supply and would like to add a 12 volt battery as well.
We used two separate battery systems in this case, because we needed something capable of powering 3000 watts for hours at a time. There are 3 16v batteries in series for the cart itself, and 3 massive 12v Stinger batteries that power the audio system. We definitely gave up reserve time on the actual driving of the cart for the audio benefits in parades and at events. The use a Stinger 60amp power supply to charge and maintain the audio batteries. Your best bet would be a 12v battery you can squeeze in somewhere, and a battery tender to top it off when the cart is parked.