SoundSplinter
10+ year member
Senior VIP Member
The RL-p12 will work in a 1 cu ft net sealed box fairly well. I have a customer who has used his in a 0.55 cu ft net sealed box and loved it (though he admits that overall and especially low-end output was lessened). It's a game of give or take, are you aiming for the flattest frequency response, or for maximum low-end extension, for a peaked output, for overall maximum output, or any combination thereof?But anyways if this sub doesn't work well in 1 cube with that kind of power. Why would SS recommend that box size? Just curious cuz my buddy has limited space and was thinking of doing a 12 in a pretty small box, about 1^3 after dis. with about 1k watts.
From my understanding, the enclosure in question here is a pre-fabricated 1.03 cu ft internal volume sealed box. After driver displacement, this will be closer to 0.83-85 cu ft net volume, which judging from experience would certainly reduce the output capacity of the RL-p12. As I've stated, 1.25 - 1.35 cu ft sealed (or 1.5 cu ft net vented @ 34 Hz) in my opinion, is the sweet spot for this driver. It will extend low and maintain smooth output over a wide range of frequencies. Going smaller, you may be afforded a flatter response curve, but you will not maintain the same low-frequency extension that so many people in this hobby desire.
I strongly recommend that anyone using a SoundSplinter driver email me first to discuss what type of enclosure you plan on using. I'll do my best to guide you in the direction that I feel best suits your application - though of course it is important for the user to gain an understanding of the process so that they can make their own decisions and decide what is best for themselves (afterall, I can only guess as to what someone I don't know may really want).
PS. I will be updating the website over the next week in order to reflect more detailed enclosure recommendations //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
