I have yet to try a 4in port, been pretty busy, but have a couple questions about this 3in port, it gets decently loud in the cab, its actually flexing everything in the truck and really beating up my back but its not really all that loud for all the damage it seems like its doing, why would it move and shake everything so violently but not be very loud doing it?
Very good question actually. The reasoning is that pressure and intensity are based on two different physical variables. For instance, you can have a 10Hz sine wave move the sub quite well and produce a lot of pressure at the port, but it would likely have a more physical effect on the vehicle than acoustical if 10Hz is not an axial resonance in the vehicle and if it is out of phase. Most vehicles have axial resonances around the 16Hz range then output drops off there in most cases, but even then it may be an 1/8 harmonic or something that is less efficient where the acoustical output may be inferior to the physical movements that occur. Pressure is based on this form of movement where the air just compresses and expands without a sense of phase. That being the main reasoning of inaudible output, an out of phase response still has the same physical effects of pressure, maybe dropping only 1/3 of its pressure at 180 degrees for an average vehicle cabin. What that means is that if the port and driver are out of phase completely, you still get output. But though it may cause more pressure fluctuation based on lower frequencies, it may not couple well acoustically and be very faint. If you have ever seen the ROOM OF DOOM, look it up on youtube. This is a perfect example of pressure vs intensity. The 11-12Hz signal it produces can barely be heard, but can easily be felt. Intensity is what you feel when you put your hand in front of the cone and feel the oscillations occur. The more intense that is, the more output you will get, but if the frequencies that are most intense in output are not coupled to the vehicles nodes, then again you will get a lot of sound output, but no rattles, etc. This happens normally at higher frequencies into the mid bass region especially sense most designs work more efficiently in those ranges due to the limited volumes of compression we work with in car audio. Ever seen a response curve where it peaks above 100Hz higher than at tuning? This is due to efficiency and frequency relationship to that of the enclosures main compression volume tuning, not what it is actually tuned to at the port. There are two acoustical responses that occur in a box. one is inside the compression chamber, one is just outside the port. And if the port fights the compression tuning, you get out of phase responses.
So with pressure you have movement and compression. Pressure=compression/expansion with the added variable of timing. Intensity=power/pressure relationships. The two are measured differently, but share a common goal. To create output. In general, you can push a lot of air and not hear it well due to phase and coupling effects, or get hardly any mach out of the port, but the sound be very intense from correct coupling and phase. This is why pro audio drivers cost so much because they can conform to a more efficient/proper bass response curve than the lower sensitive drivers we use to gain power due to limited space.
You can make a horn that barely shakes a piece of paper at the opening, but makes your chest hurt. This is the timing effects of frequency oscillation. So again real quick. Pressure is more physical and intensity is more acoustical. This is also why a design that measures on a meter at 130dB can outperform that of a 140dB design in output by the ear.
Example: Blow air out of your mouth but don't make a vibration with your vocal chords. That is pressure from compression. Then hum only with your mouth open. That is intensity. If you hum, you get less air movement, but can get louder by ear, but vice versa you can blow a paper cup off a coffee table and not make a noise that audible. Make sense I hope?
I won't be able to reply back for a while. Ill be gone, but I hope that helps a bit. Sorry if it because a tad technical.