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Side vented vs front?
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<blockquote data-quote="GeekSquad" data-source="post: 7406205" data-attributes="member: 634422"><p>Sound is omni-directional: meaning it travels in all directions at the same time. This is the fundamental cause of the group delay functions that take place in the automotive environment and the reason why the subwoofer output needs to be loaded as close as possible to the rear boundary of the vehicle. You can play around with this phenomena and acheive some interesting results, but this rule of thumb his yet to fail me in any vehicle.</p><p></p><p>BTW, there is tons of empirical evidence to support this conclusion, but who wants to read it besides the electrical and mechanical engineers among us??</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GeekSquad, post: 7406205, member: 634422"] Sound is omni-directional: meaning it travels in all directions at the same time. This is the fundamental cause of the group delay functions that take place in the automotive environment and the reason why the subwoofer output needs to be loaded as close as possible to the rear boundary of the vehicle. You can play around with this phenomena and acheive some interesting results, but this rule of thumb his yet to fail me in any vehicle. BTW, there is tons of empirical evidence to support this conclusion, but who wants to read it besides the electrical and mechanical engineers among us?? [/QUOTE]
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