yes but with less spl.massive port man you could have done 2x12 and got the same results with port noise
downloaded the program and if i tune to 44hz is the only way i dont over extend the sub past x max above tuning. port area for some reason has no effect.The problem is most likely with your enclosure. Your box design should reflect the excursion and power handling abilities of your sub.
Download WinISD Alpha (not beta) and correctly enter the parameters of your sub. There is a tab that allows you to see the excursion of the sub at any given frequency with any given amount of power. Adjust your box design according to that and build a new one.
Remember, cabin gain exaggerates low frequencies. You could be expecting too much of your sub at higher ones. At a tuning of 37, you're going to have a huge peak around those two lower frequencies.
i was just saying the box program is confirming what is happening in my enclosure. but according to the program all boxes tuned to 38hz should have the same problem.Box programs, meh. Everything changes once the box is put into a vehicle.
The box may be very peaky, causing it to have trouble controlling the sub if you're playing out of its optimum bandwidth.
im going to modify the boxes i have my cutting out the bend so that the port open up into the other corner. If that sounds shitty ill re build wither using 32" of area or a 6" aero port.I agree with the option of; way to much port
The sub is not seeing the box (the air is simply rushing out the port)
You have to make up your mind, do you want an SPL box that plays limited frequencies loud or a box that play a wide range of music loud and in control
With that much air space I would also lower the tuning frequency
If it's a port issue, it's because the box is acting like a truncated transmission line. Basically what's happening is that instead of acting like a resonator which a ported box does, it's acting as a phase inverter like a transmission line. Problem is that the line isn't long enough to have the backwave shift phase by 180 degrees, and all you're getting is terrible mechanical damping.gonna add 45;s since it will only take a sec to do. is it even worth trying?
yea that sounds exactly like my problem. because it sounds like its canceling out or somthing. that would explain why it moves move in the box than out if it. Dont transmission lines require the same port area as cone area though?If it's a port issue, it's because the box is acting like a truncated transmission line. Basically what's happening is that instead of acting like a resonator which a ported box does, it's acting as a phase inverter like a transmission line. Problem is that the line isn't long enough to have the backwave shift phase by 180 degrees, and all you're getting is terrible mechanical damping.
Yes, but your box isn't acting like a true transmission line. By not giving the speaker airspace to pressurize, all that's happening is that you're shooting the air down a tube. A transmission line does the same thing, except it actually exits the tube as something useful.yea that sounds exactly like my problem. because it sounds like its canceling out or somthing. that would explain why it moves move in the box than out if it. Dont transmission lines require the same port area as cone area though?