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Subwoofers
one 15 or two 12's
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<blockquote data-quote="Electrodynamic" data-source="post: 4587925" data-attributes="member: 548723"><p>The OP was asking about taking up <em>less</em> space. Two 15's is quite the oposite. Bad idea.</p><p></p><p>What germanyt was talking about is the differences between different subwoofers. Take two 12's that require 1.5 ft^3 each and compare them to a single 15 that requires 2.5 ft^3 sealed. The 15 is going to take up less room. But those same two 12's will take up less room than a 15 that requires 3.5 ft^3 sealed.</p><p></p><p>If you're not worried about trying to break 150 dB and you're more concerned with your sub stage sounding better while taking up less room, there are a few options. But it all depends on what you want. If you want to be in the high 140's, take the SQ and box-size portions of the pie and chop it down quite a bit.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Electrodynamic, post: 4587925, member: 548723"] The OP was asking about taking up [I]less[/I] space. Two 15's is quite the oposite. Bad idea. What germanyt was talking about is the differences between different subwoofers. Take two 12's that require 1.5 ft^3 each and compare them to a single 15 that requires 2.5 ft^3 sealed. The 15 is going to take up less room. But those same two 12's will take up less room than a 15 that requires 3.5 ft^3 sealed. If you're not worried about trying to break 150 dB and you're more concerned with your sub stage sounding better while taking up less room, there are a few options. But it all depends on what you want. If you want to be in the high 140's, take the SQ and box-size portions of the pie and chop it down quite a bit. [/QUOTE]
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