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How does a 4th order bandpass work?
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<blockquote data-quote="mat3833" data-source="post: 8793886" data-attributes="member: 587645"><p>You aren't wrong, but we aren't talking about vibrations traveling through anything other than air. A sealed enclosure is just that, sealed. No air escapes the enclosure and no pressure wave can escape. The transmission of energy from vibrations is much different than the pressure waves we are talking about. </p><p></p><p>Look up compression and rarefaction. Your speaker produces one "compression" wave and one "rarefaction" wave. </p><p></p><p>Matt</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mat3833, post: 8793886, member: 587645"] You aren't wrong, but we aren't talking about vibrations traveling through anything other than air. A sealed enclosure is just that, sealed. No air escapes the enclosure and no pressure wave can escape. The transmission of energy from vibrations is much different than the pressure waves we are talking about. Look up compression and rarefaction. Your speaker produces one "compression" wave and one "rarefaction" wave. Matt [/QUOTE]
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How does a 4th order bandpass work?
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