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<blockquote data-quote="Buck" data-source="post: 8863972" data-attributes="member: 591582"><p>I love theorizing about all the ways you can arrange the orders of the sound. I mean there's almost an infinite amount of ways to do sound, if you have the right calculations and understand the effect you want. There's also boxes like ABC boxes and there's all sorts of crazy line based enclosures and horns and tapped horns and basically all sorts of singular structures or layered structures along both the front and rear wave off a woofer that resonate different frequencies of sound. The relative impedance to the energy moving in and out of any resonance stage is a key to adjusting like the smoothness and bandwidth and reaction of the sound, like how some sub systems sound hollow or muddy or crisp or deep, etc. All those stages or "orders" or however you think of it, they all wind up tuning each other when stacked in series on a line path from the front or rear wave.</p><p></p><p>Bose does make some pretty neat enclosures, at least from my nerd perspective. </p><p></p><p>I think the key always comes down to knowing what you want. You can make a huge SQ box that plays nicely and is loud on low power, but maybe it's not like 150 db+ loud at 30 hz in the same space. Just gotta know what you want.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buck, post: 8863972, member: 591582"] I love theorizing about all the ways you can arrange the orders of the sound. I mean there's almost an infinite amount of ways to do sound, if you have the right calculations and understand the effect you want. There's also boxes like ABC boxes and there's all sorts of crazy line based enclosures and horns and tapped horns and basically all sorts of singular structures or layered structures along both the front and rear wave off a woofer that resonate different frequencies of sound. The relative impedance to the energy moving in and out of any resonance stage is a key to adjusting like the smoothness and bandwidth and reaction of the sound, like how some sub systems sound hollow or muddy or crisp or deep, etc. All those stages or "orders" or however you think of it, they all wind up tuning each other when stacked in series on a line path from the front or rear wave. Bose does make some pretty neat enclosures, at least from my nerd perspective. I think the key always comes down to knowing what you want. You can make a huge SQ box that plays nicely and is loud on low power, but maybe it's not like 150 db+ loud at 30 hz in the same space. Just gotta know what you want. [/QUOTE]
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