Currently I have a bbox that’s alright but I know my subs(SDR’s) can hit harder than they are. Could anyone tell me if either of these enclosures are worth it? First is $212 and carpeted one is $160. Or does anyone have any other recommendations?
You'll get the best result having one made to your subs specs
I was actually thinking about building one myself. I just don’t really have that much knowledge when it comes to audio.I agree.
If you are willing to build yourself, We may be able to help you with a proper enclosure.
My amps and battery gotta sit where my seat is in order to run my sql's ported in my saturn vueI have plenty of room even with a 4.5 cubic foot box. Still got 50% room left back there. However after being told today when they were fixing the running board brackets, I was told the rockers are gone behind the running boards...I'm ready to just blow the Explorer up,lol.
Actuallu using a subsonic filter allows you to usae a smaller box tuned the same as a bigger box or the same box tuned lower "(BASS box pro)".If you were local I’d build you a box for 200$. it seems like a ton of people have the Skar SDR. It’s the sub I’ve done boxes for most this year. I’ve seen a few of those skar boxes fall apart. They’ll work ok for the SDR, but I’ve had 2 builds for the Skar evl subs in the last month and both of them had blown panels on the Skar box. If you go with a prefab, get the largest box you can get and set a subsonic filter. The port tuning on those prefab boxes is higher than they advertise. If you’re planning on listening to rebased music or playing low test tones in a prefab box, you’ll blow those SDR subs. Playing under the box port tuning will kill subs.
The ssf prevents the sub from playing below the tuning frequency of the box...it doesn't help you run a smaller boxActuallu using a subsonic filter allows you to usae a smaller box tuned the same as a bigger box or the same box tuned lower "(BASS box pro)".![]()
Actuallu using a subsonic filter allows you to usae a smaller box tuned the same as a bigger box or the same box tuned lower "(BASS box pro)".![]()
The prefabs don’t actually account for sub displacement also. It doesn’t matter as much on the larger enclosures, but on the smaller single 10 boxes for example, the sub can take a 1.5 cube box tuned to 35 HZ to 1.3 cubes tuned to 37 hz just by putting the sub in the box. This might actually meter higher than a lower tuned box if it doesn’t fall apart, but i wouldn’t like music with a 37 hz port tuning personally.The ssf prevents the sub from playing below the tuning frequency of the box...it doesn't help you run a smaller box
That's not what BASS box pro software shows me. With an active subsonic filter, prior to amplifaction, the SSF (or technicaclly the infrasonic filter) does what you say, true, but also allows the woofer to work in smaller boxes as it no longer is having to work on those frequencies blocked by the filter, kind of like it sees the box as if it were a smaller driver. In some instances, substantially smaller boxes. There are limitations too, but all the same, SSF is always a good idea when you are tuning an octave or two above. Rarely is that not the case with car audio subs. Different story in home theater where a lot of infrasonic material is added to the soundtracks. Hit me up if you ever want an expample, I'll run the numbers and show you the graphs, it's kinda cool.The ssf prevents the sub from playing below the tuning frequency of the box...it doesn't help you run a smaller box
The smaller box would have a higher tuning frequency...and the ssf would still just be set to protect your sub playing too far below that tuning frequency...it's not a magic filter that allows a sub to play the same in a bigger or smaller enclosure...That's not what BASS box pro software shows me. With an active subsonic filter, prior to amplifaction, the SSF (or technicaclly the infrasonic filter) does what you say, true, but also allows the woofer to work in smaller boxes as it no longer is having to work on those frequencies blocked by the filter, kind of like it sees the box as if it were a smaller driver. In some instances, substantially smaller boxes. There are limitations too, but all the same, SSF is always a good idea when you are tuning an octave or two above. Rarely is that not the case with car audio subs. Different story in home theater where a lot of infrasonic material is added to the soundtracks. Hit me up if you ever want an expample, I'll run the numbers and show you the graphs, it's kinda cool.