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box rise question
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<blockquote data-quote="keep_hope_alive" data-source="post: 7935643" data-attributes="member: 576029"><p>this is the main argument you have maintained - that it cannot be calculated.</p><p></p><p>you feel this way because you don't understand it. you can't calculate something you don't understand.</p><p></p><p>physics is predictable and can be represented with mathematics.</p><p></p><p>solving wave equations (differential equations) is time consuming.</p><p></p><p>no one cares that much about car audio to predict something that can be measured easily.</p><p></p><p>just because no one bothers to calculate something doesn't mean it cannot be modeled accurately.</p><p></p><p>my summary is that box rise is better measured than calculated - though you can predict it with enough effort.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="keep_hope_alive, post: 7935643, member: 576029"] this is the main argument you have maintained - that it cannot be calculated. you feel this way because you don't understand it. you can't calculate something you don't understand. physics is predictable and can be represented with mathematics. solving wave equations (differential equations) is time consuming. no one cares that much about car audio to predict something that can be measured easily. just because no one bothers to calculate something doesn't mean it cannot be modeled accurately. my summary is that box rise is better measured than calculated - though you can predict it with enough effort. [/QUOTE]
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