wall question for pros

TnT_Sounds
10+ year member

profiling gets **** done!
Wanting to get some advice from the pros and oldschool junkies in the hobby. I'm doing a wall in a 92 Bronco with 8 12's and I have been getting mixed opinions on whats best for audible loudness purposes. I was told a bandpass would be my only option for a wall because of what I'm wanting. And a bandpass has self internal loading walls therefore putting the pressure and audible loudness by the time the wave comes out at my ears in the seats.

If I was to do a regular wall with all subs and port firing forward in any position, will cause the subs and port to load off the front windshield, dash, and firewall and putting all the sound and pressure out the windows and scattered everywhere else but at my ears.

The subs I'm going to be using plot well in a 4th order with .8cu per sub @44hz tuning and 1.4cu sealed per. The response is as flat as anything musical should be from 26-70hz before any +/-3db. Also without taking into any account for cabin gain.

 
Wanting to get some advice from the pros and oldschool junkies in the hobby. I'm doing a wall in a 92 Bronco with 8 12's and I have been getting mixed opinions on whats best for audible loudness purposes. I was told a bandpass would be my only option for a wall because of what I'm wanting. And a bandpass has self internal loading walls therefore putting the pressure and audible loudness by the time the wave comes out at my ears in the seats.
If I was to do a regular wall with all subs and port firing forward in any position, will cause the subs and port to load off the front windshield, dash, and firewall and putting all the sound and pressure out the windows and scattered everywhere else but at my ears.

The subs I'm going to be using plot well in a 4th order with .8cu per sub @44hz tuning and 1.4cu sealed per. The response is as flat as anything musical should be from 26-70hz before any +/-3db. Also without taking into any account for cabin gain.
Due to the amount of pressure that will be caused in such a small acoustical environment, with 8 12s, unless you are concerned with actual spl numbers, will be sufficient in any design properly made. But the ratio of the cabin area with the subs acoustical chamber has to be calculated together for an overall response of the design. This is actually true with any design. If you consider a ported design, it is actually going to act like a bandpass anyhow, but since the environment is so acoustically small compared to the power and compression it will be given, a smooth response will be likely in any position of the vehicle in this case. Yes, vehicle resonances will exist, but with that much reverberation and reflection from the vehicles properties in relation to the subs acoustical chamber properties, it will sound likely no different than actually sticking your head inside an enclosure, which you will notice if this is done, that the response curve does become flat...audibly anyhow.

So, not so much emphasis on phase direction and loading of a specific position should be considered rather than finding the coupling of the enclosure and the vehicle by calculating it as a quasi design. So, two ways about going with this....I'm not going to tell exactly how, because this is something I have figured myself and gives me the reason to do what I do, but like mentioned, one of those ways is to figure for a quasi 4th, if your using a slot ported design, and calculate the front cabin area(what is left) as a ported acoustical compression chamber for the enclosure design. This should give you a good idea of what it will do. Using a 6th order as a wall can be calculated as an 8th order BP as well. Again, when doing wall design, considering the cabin as a compression area of the design is very important to get the ratio of chambers correct.

Does that help at all? If not, I can do the design for you if you like.

As far as the scattering of sound everywhere but your ears, no, it will scatter like that, but will include any listening position as well, with max power levels. The lower the volume, the more you will begin to notice the resonances though, if you are concerned about musical output as well.

Just some thoughts.

 
^^this^^ 8 12s in a Bronco? Any type of 4th wall is almost gonna sound the same. I love broncos used to have a bronco deuce those things corner like champs especially with trailers behind them.

 
sounds like your on the right track so far
get with John Hone on FB or YT he will confirm or assist you. he is the GOD of 4th order walls.
Cool thanks... Where are you at in Colorado?

will 8 12's with port fit facing forward? That might be why people are saying your only option is a 4th order
Yes they will fit i have nearly 70" wide I believe.

Due to the amount of pressure that will be caused in such a small acoustical environment, with 8 12s, unless you are concerned with actual spl numbers, will be sufficient in any design properly made. But the ratio of the cabin area with the subs acoustical chamber has to be calculated together for an overall response of the design. This is actually true with any design. If you consider a ported design, it is actually going to act like a bandpass anyhow, but since the environment is so acoustically small compared to the power and compression it will be given, a smooth response will be likely in any position of the vehicle in this case. Yes, vehicle resonances will exist, but with that much reverberation and reflection from the vehicles properties in relation to the subs acoustical chamber properties, it will sound likely no different than actually sticking your head inside an enclosure, which you will notice if this is done, that the response curve does become flat...audibly anyhow.
So, not so much emphasis on phase direction and loading of a specific position should be considered rather than finding the coupling of the enclosure and the vehicle by calculating it as a quasi design. So, two ways about going with this....I'm not going to tell exactly how, because this is something I have figured myself and gives me the reason to do what I do, but like mentioned, one of those ways is to figure for a quasi 4th, if your using a slot ported design, and calculate the front cabin area(what is left) as a ported acoustical compression chamber for the enclosure design. This should give you a good idea of what it will do. Using a 6th order as a wall can be calculated as an 8th order BP as well. Again, when doing wall design, considering the cabin as a compression area of the design is very important to get the ratio of chambers correct.

Does that help at all? If not, I can do the design for you if you like.

As far as the scattering of sound everywhere but your ears, no, it will scatter like that, but will include any listening position as well, with max power levels. The lower the volume, the more you will begin to notice the resonances though, if you are concerned about musical output as well.

Just some thoughts.
Yes all that is good info, some lost me, but I think I got it. I would love to have you design something but my build funds are way tight and I was lucky enough to get some great deals from db drive for equipment.

 
Cool thanks... Where are you at in Colorado?


Yes they will fit i have nearly 70" wide I believe.

Yes all that is good info, some lost me, but I think I got it. I would love to have you design something but my build funds are way tight and I was lucky enough to get some great deals from db drive for equipment.
No problem. I can still help if possible with some advice when needed, just PM me anytime. I'm always around.

 
What you have been told or how you are interpreting this "advice" is wrong.

You are saying a 4th order bandpass is good because it will reach your ears but a normal 4th order will scatter everywhere and go out the windows?

You need to do some more research on what you want and how you are going to get there.

When you have a port forward firing in a wall, it's always best to have it, if optimal, on one side of the vehicle.

Preferrably driver side.

Your higher score will usually come from passenger side.

If it's swapped, typical interference from the steering wheel can cause score to go down.

Not all vehicles do that though but most do.

It is typical the pressure will increase when the window\door that is on same side as port is open.

IF pressure decreases when you do this, then you have displaced more volume in the vehicle than what is forward the B pillar.

This is the actual goal when building a wall but not all walls will be able to do this based on goals.

This is also why many vehicles into the 170s and higher need to be sealed to continue gaining pressure.

 
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TnT_Sounds

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