Immacomputer
10+ year member
Cloud disappear
When you put a sub into a box, you are applying a transfer function. A transfer function is used to describe the frequency relationship between an input signal and an output signal. When you add an enclosure to a speaker, you change the frequency response which means you have applied a transfer function to it.Can you explain what that is?
Your car looks like it acts much more like an expanding transmission line/horn rather than a bandpass. Most vehicles' transfer functions are based around either a transmission line setup or a horn like setup.
If your car is about 9 feet from the trunk to the windshield, I would bet that you have a peak around 40hz with the windows down and low frequency extension getting into the mid 20s but slightly lower than the 40hz range. I bet with the windows up, that 40hz area peak gets reduced and you're left with a much flatter sound with a little more gain in the lower 20s compared to the windows down. With the sunroof open, you would be mass loading the line/horn and you probably get a peak somewhere in the mid to high 20s.
Like stated previously, your vehicle's acoustics play a large role in the final sound. I have found that modeling a car's interior like an expanding transmission line gives a pretty good idea of the transfer function. I was able to get a very close to life model of my sub/enclosure/vehicle response by applying the theoretical plotted graph of my sub/enclosure and combining it into a model of a large, expanding transmission line. I found that the theoretical plot gave me a peak around 25hz (mine is actually at 22hz) and a dip around 33-35hz (mine dips by 1 dB around 28-30hz) with it being flat up until 70hz (mine is flat to about 75hz). I thought it was pretty accurate with the loose dimensions I gave it as they weren't extremely accurate.
