Kicker "Isobaric"... maybe the Solobaric? I remember way back in the day say oh around in exactly 1990 when I first got into car audio and listened to a pair of original and new at that time, Kicker Comp 10's and they blew me away. I helped build an isobaric enclosure in 1991 in a Cavalier Z24 where we had to remove the back seat back and cut the bracing to fit the box in. 4 Orion 12's and a Punch box sitting on top of that with two 10's. He shattered a front window to the local K-Mart costing him $5k. The only aperiodic enclosure I have run into in all these years was from a very high end shop in Florida and was a single sub mounted in the front passenger foot well/floor. It had a flexible membrane to the rear of the enclosure which was exposed to the outside of the vehicle.
Was this just a hobby of yours or did you work at a high end audio shop? I am curious because both Isobaric and Aperiodic take knowledge and skills to pull off correctly. I am just not sure a person such as yourself who misquotes so easily or ignores portions of text or shows low comprehension skills would retain the knowledge to effectively construct these types of enclosures. If I am wrong here, I apologize... this is the first real car audio related post I have personally seen from you.
Yes. the Solobaric. It was designed to emulate the isobaric loading achieved by using dual woofers wired out of phase and mechanically "locked" to each other. The biggest isobaric I did was with 4 15" Petras woofers in a face-to-face push-pull configuration in a Toyota 4-Runner. The woofers were one-offs, made for us by Petras as they were breaking into the market. The amp was HiFonics, possibly a Zeus (they only had 3 models at the time, I think). We used HiFonics or Rockford amps mostly, but would install whatever the customer wanted.
The same customer had the vehicle converted to a soft-top (no one said money=taste).
We were not a "high-end" shop, but had wealthy customers in a wealthy area, so we did whatever they wanted and they paid what it cost. We were not a "buy a head unit, get a free install" shop. We were a startup doing car upgrades of all kinds (HKS, Trust, Greddy, BBS, Enkei, Veilside). Rich kids with money were a good source of our income. They wanted to be able to go to their friends and say they had something no one else had. Imagine spending $3K on Naca ducts for a Mitsu Eclipse. Yeah, that's the kind of silly money they spent. So, if they saw something in Car Audio or Car Stereo Review, they wanted to be the first on THEIR block to have it.
Car Audio started to change very quickly and we found we were making more money at doing the speed upgrades, and that was what customers were asking for. It was hard to keep up with the industry without focusing on it 100%. I would have LOVED to be doing shit like laser interferometry for proper imaging, gutting and replacing a complete interior for audio, etc etc, but it wasn't to be. We let the money steer the business, despite my desire to focus on car audio. Gotta' pay the bills.
I was MECP certified, but TBH it was not a terribly difficult certification to get. Most of what I learned was from doing.