It's a little more complex than that when it comes to cancelation. Yes, sound is pressure. Yes, being out of phase will add a bunch of cancelation. But when you have sound waves interacting at angles weird things start to happen. You are definitely going to make pressure either way.
Totally not discrediting you man, you know so much more than I do about enclosure design and whatnot. But from my limited experience with multiple drivers interacting at angles narrower than 45 degrees, they have alot of odd peaks and dips across their range, but I'm speaking from more of a midbass/midrange perspective. Not sure how much of that translates to sub-60hz frequencies. It's really hard to model anything like this, hell I don't think there is a "consumer" level program for doing that even.
Matt
Well, bass is omnidirectional, so the pressure flow works differently with angles than midrange or highs. Mids and highs actually have a limited angles from main axis of propagation that produces sound. Bass isn't directional like a mid is. Highs are super directional, that's why you see people with tweeter pods. Subs are just frequency driven air pumps. If all of the subs are pumping together, then everything is all good, as long as they aren't too close together and have enough room to not have any specific part of the cone too pressurized.
You are correct, in a way, in that expanding-width chambers or ports are inherently more peaky, such as a horn will tend to be more peaky than a transmission line, and that's due how pressurization works in different volumes/cross-sectional areas at tuning frequency. A sub horn box, where the sub has very little line width at the throat, will resonate harder at tuning frequency than a t-line would, but the db/octave rolloff can be worse than a t-line, because if you're playing out of resonance with a horn, that tiny airspace at the throat doesn't provide much sound-boost, if the whole horn isn't loading.
If the whole horn doesn't load, that tiny airspace doesn't provide hardly any pressure to help make sound travel through the rest of the horn. But, if you have a t-line, the line width is consistent, which means the roll off away from tuning frequency will be more consistent. The amount of air behind the sub in a t-line allows the sub to move a lot more easily out of resonance, and there's more air to be pressurized immediately behind the sub, which then helps pressurize the whole line better across a wider bandwidth, and that's why t-lines are OG probably the best all-around enclosure for any type of music in any environment, IMO. I hope that made sense.
I stayed up late fighting that 6x 12's box and I'm just
