ameuba10
10+ year member
Senior VIP Member
i currently have a fiberglass box that fits behind my rear wheel well and i was thinking of building a box just like it on the other side. long story short, i decided not to go with it for time/money issues and the fact i dont wanna hassle with building the other box. but nonetheless i was thinking about it.
a friend of mine told me not to do it because of sound cancellation. he said that having the subs facing each other will cancel out each others sound waves, thus voiding the need for two speakers.
that got me to think. i remember from physics class that two tuning forks tuned to the same frequency that when pinged, and the brought close together, that the amplitude will increase. and i have witnessed this first hand.
now, assuming that the two speakers that are facing each other are playing at the same frequency (which they should), wouldn't the amplitude increase rather than decrease? i guess this would go for any multiple speaker configuration in close proximity.
a friend of mine told me not to do it because of sound cancellation. he said that having the subs facing each other will cancel out each others sound waves, thus voiding the need for two speakers.
that got me to think. i remember from physics class that two tuning forks tuned to the same frequency that when pinged, and the brought close together, that the amplitude will increase. and i have witnessed this first hand.
now, assuming that the two speakers that are facing each other are playing at the same frequency (which they should), wouldn't the amplitude increase rather than decrease? i guess this would go for any multiple speaker configuration in close proximity.
