Hmm, I liked my brahma 10 in a sealed enclosure in a trunk well enough. Wasn't amazing for rap, but it was enough to get a visceral bass feeling out of most music. As far as ears bleeding from loud music, I think that's the $200 components. I personally, more than once, have listening to high end HT setups WAYYY to loud, not realizing it, just becuase it still wasnt' really hurting my ears too much, it didnt' sound that much louder than some cars I had been in, it just sounded nicer with a lot more "full" sound to it. Without distortion, things dont tend to hurt as much apparently. Drums beating me in my chest, trumpets sounding totally lifelike, suddenly the come into the demo room and tell me that's at least 120db full range, and I should probably turn it down now.If you want a flatter responce...sure. But in every genre from Rap to Jazz to Rock to Reggae you want a bass/midbass heavy system. It just sounds better to the ears. You want the kick drum pumping in your chest and you want to experence the lowest notes on the bass guitar, not just hear them. Most people will find that their ears do not enjoy the sound of a perfectly flat responce. Most will want a low end heavy system with a dip just above most volcals and then a peak right near the tippy top. This is what sounds most realistic to most. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
If you have a perfectly flat responce, by the time you are feeling the drums and experenceing the bass guitar your ears are bleeding from the shrill vocals and high notes. Our ears are far more sensetive to the vocal bandwith than to the bass and midbass frequincies hence the greater output desire to have a "balenced" system. When you go to a concert they have a few lead amplifiers and a few 100Hz + PA speakers to set the sound stage....then they have 4, 5, 8 5'x5' PA subwoofers. They spent a lot more money on the subwoofers than they did on the 100Hz+ and they are looking for shear quality over a wide area. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
IMO a the cheapest subwoofer you would want, even for a pure SQ system, when talking high end install would be something like a 12" high end woofer like an IDmax with a healthy 1000w in a low tuned ported enclosure.
My Mag 15" sealed with 1000w was GREAT for rock, reggae, Jazz, and even when I wanted to do some moderate ground pounding.
I agree, a perfectly flat responce rarely sounds natural, especially in a car. I do disagree however, that it takes a 12 inch sub with over 20mm of excursion in a PORTED enclosure no less to have a decent amount of bass, let alone enough to keep up with 6.5 inch speakers running IB and a 1"tweet.