idea just popped into my head about them... Id like to try one for daily in the ranger. can someone please explain how they work, the basics of design, and the pros and cons of them for a daily enclosure?
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idea just popped into my head about them... Id like to try one for daily in the ranger. can someone please explain how they work, the basics of design, and the pros and cons of them for a daily enclosure?
@pro-rabbit ; :blush:
Subwoofer Enclosures, Sixth and Eigth Order/Bass Reflex and Bandpass
that explains the 6th
and a clamshell is not a regular sixth order...
I never said it was. I don't know anything about either. Was just trying to help
I've never seen a 6th clamshell and there's probably a reason for that...IMO 6th's are a PITA as is, just do a normal setup with it if you wanna use it. The easiest way to do the clam with a 6th would be to have it be parallel tuned but parallel tuned setups blow most of the time...
A 6th clam shell would be a pita for sure. The reason is because of how touchy a 6th order can be.
However, if you do a center ported clam shell it will react like a 6th order.
It can, just depends on the overall design and build. It would would need to be 100% accurate in design and build or you will get some negative reactions from the setup.
maybe Ill just stick with the straight up bass reflex lol. simple is the key...
I run a series tuned 6th order, or clamshell if you want. Baffles need to have a decent angle otherwise front/rear wave end up cancelling each other.
First try would play from 30-35Hz and drop off like a bish. Made a few adjustments and now it plays 30-50+ with authority.
I'd base 4th, 6th, or whatever off the subs you plan to use and what music you will mostly play. Mine will play into the 20's but I hate that **** and never play it. 4th orders are also quite popular for playing stuff that low. Some subs work better in 4th's, some work better in 6th's....