is there any way to help lessen impedance rise with box design. Any tips that you can give on this would be nice
is there any way to help lessen impedance rise with box design. Any tips that you can give on this would be nice

Make the box bigger.
Bought from:whiteram,Pyro_by_nature,AudioXtremes,Slab,IA2
Sold to:annarbor84,ssackett,tapout383
built for:skeptikal,Raid3r89
SHADY SELLER:memphisman00
Subs:4 Incriminator Audio Death Row 15's
amps: Memphis 4K
154.8@34hz

Eliminate dead space, just try to keep the design as functional as possible. Resining the inside can also help.
Refs- hessdawg, Pepsifiend69, iltoivfe, ownage9, lifted95blaze, Buckshot, da box king, Po.Sic, baseballer1100, vetkilr, dkguitarist, Queball, qtipextra, LaserRed38, 350_regal, RidnClean, BushJ311 and a bunch more...

This thread may help, its more of a discussion on what it actually is, but it is mentioned somewhere in there what causes it as well.
http://www.soundsolutionsaudio.com/f...opic=2690&st=0
Refs- hessdawg, Pepsifiend69, iltoivfe, ownage9, lifted95blaze, Buckshot, da box king, Po.Sic, baseballer1100, vetkilr, dkguitarist, Queball, qtipextra, LaserRed38, 350_regal, RidnClean, BushJ311 and a bunch more...
very good read and from what I gather then smaller box less rise and larger more rise but in a larger box then the sub would work more efficently w/ the loss of power from the imp. rise. Is this correct?If so it would seam that the best box would be very small and super efficent
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