Flex68
10+ year member
dilligaf
I don't think that arguing with you ever gains anyone a thing, so I won't expect it.Look another thread where Mr. flex68 spouts drivel and then tries to back it up with more bullshit. Not only have you failed to comprehend my simple statement, but you have in fact taken off full speed in the wrong direction. I can attest to the fact my sub woofers that had a 1/8'' wide gap, driven in -10 degree weather, were 100% normal functioning. Not to forget I was running a DD z1 at .33 ohms to the sub woofer. No tears, no rubbing, and no my car did not implode. If anything the cold more dense air would make your system pressurize much easier, and run cooler while doing it. I love it when people like you, who think t/s are everything, get in a thread and try to talk about **** you have no clue on.
However, to proselytize that T/S parameters are unimportant---- as you seem to be attempting to indicate---- is about as brilliant as saying a motor's dyno ratings don't mean shizz when trying to determine WHP.
If you don't base what you want/expect out of a sub on the T/S parameters, as individually tested, then wtf do you base it on, lol.
You're the one spouting stupid BS, and failing to comprehend.
idgaf whether one is after SPL or SQ, putting max RMS to a sub in extreme cold without giving it any chance to warm up strikes me as similar to those who choose to run a system in a non-competition daily driver with no fusing: it is taking an unnecessary risk for no real reason or reward.
I no how the VVX responded, and that was/is enough for me to choose to believe that there are negative consequences if one repetitively hits a cold sub with full volume, allowing no warm-up time with a more moderate signal.
If you choose to believe otherwise, good on you, and no skin off my nose.
(But there's no way you can know whether the subs in your quoted example were "normal functioning" unless you were capturing the numbers on them at that point, lol)
