A little big? Is that a typo?The Quatro is an excellent driver, but the OP's enclosure is a little big for the 10".
Huh? What "spectrum"? The "spectrum" is from ~20 hz - 65 hz. Are you saying it will "suffer" at 65 hz?I was trying to be nice. The OP's box is more than 50% larger than the recommended enclosure volume for a 10" Quatro. That can hardly be called "slightly oversized." Having used a 10" Quatro, the hyperbole above only qualifies as wishful thinking. In a larger enclosure, the Dayton will reach deeper at the expense of the rest of the spectrum. .
Okay, how? Better yet, why does it matter?Ask me how I know
That must explain why you have no idea what size enclosure is recommended for the 10" in an automotive application.Agreed. I have a pair of of quatro's sitting in front of me right now, and have found they work very well in a variety of cabinet sizes.
I see that math isn't your strongsuit. If the OP's enclosure is .87ft^3 and it's more than 50% larger than the recommended volume, how is that "less than .25 cu ft," Einstein? You don't even know what the necessary volume is, remember?Your claim that a difference of less than .25 cu ft would make this driver unusable is absurd.
A mind is a terrible thing to waste. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/laugh.gif.48439b2acf2cfca21620f01e7f77d1e4.gifSpectrum?
You're right. I'm the one who's used the 10" Quatro, I'm the one who's tested in a variety of enclosures, and please forgive me for pointing this out once again, I'm the one who knows the driver's recommended enclosure volume. Where do you fit in?Clearly you have no idea wtf your talking about.
Because mine are 12's.That must explain why you have no idea what size enclosure is recommended for the 10" in an automotive application.
Too bad you don't know that the driver itself takes up some volume which will put it well within the "50%" you gave. This has to be within .25 cu ft within ideal. BFD. You claim to know what the volume is, but don't choose to share. It doesn't matter, the OP said sealed, and his volume would be fine. Sealed enclousre are very forging to volume. A claim that it's won't work is absurd. This isn't rocket science. You really should learn more about this subject before you post your nonsense.I see that math isn't your strongsuit. If the OP's enclosure is .87ft^3 and it's more than 50% larger than the recommended volume, how is that "less than .25 cu ft," Einstein? You don't even know what the necessary volume is, remember?
I agree, your use of the term spectrum is a joke. You can't explain why you brought it up, or wtf it has to do with anything here. Nothing, you don't even seem to know what it means.A mind is a terrible thing to waste. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/laugh.gif.48439b2acf2cfca21620f01e7f77d1e4.gif
Since you clearly enjoy being a blow hard, but you failed to notice I recommended a different driver, and was agreeing with another poster that the quatro would also be a good choice. Which it is.You're right. I'm the one who's used the 10" Quatro, I'm the one who's tested in a variety of enclosures, and please forgive me for pointing this out once again, I'm the one who knows the driver's recommended enclosure volume. Where do you fit in?
Apparently, you're more interested in trying to score a point and protecting what's left of your ego, instead of helping the OP find the right diver for his project. You're recommending a woofer you've never tested, a woofer whose recommended operational parameters you're unaware of, yet you're arguing vehemently. Without a doubt, the OP would be a fool not to follow your advice and blow his $100 on a woofer recommended by someone who's never used it. I wish you well.