i was commenting back in one post to multiple trains of thoughts. so it might not pertain to just one poster.
i never said the spider was the only factor. it is a very important factor that not just everyone can master to the degree that others can. i have never discredited the importance of the coil and gap geometries, the cone material, etc, each having an effect on the big picture.
it was asked what to tweek where. i cannot go over that info. what i learned, was under the word that i wouldn't openly pass certain things along. sorry, i will not.
all i can say is observe spider movement. see how and where it flexes under diff power levels and different tunes. apply the coating to certain regions, and note the changes in sound. is one method of finite tuning. it can be done to an assembled speaker. it is very time consuming. there is also the major changes of dropping in new soft parts with different base parameters to the suspension.
yes, modeling programs are useful to get you close.
we can do a lot more today with calculating and predicting than we could 10 years ago. but we still are not 100% on track where we need to be. and that is my biggest arguement.
the day we produce 100% dynamic results to what was modeled, when just any ol' company can produce a high end speaker because the science is dialed, speakers that are 90% efficient instead of .3% - 2%, i will have more positive attitude on using pure science and physics on acoustical reproduction.
i'm not trying to attack or bash anyone. so don't take it as such. i'm just standing on a different side of the fence.
Thankyou for the explanation 95stroked.
I guess what Im missing at this point is, are you saying this process is not accounted for with American made subwoofers? If this subtle nuance to speaker design is so necessary as to render specialists in training for years, and American companies cant get it right, why do we have so many companies that build such musical subwoofers? I wont get into any US vs European arguements, but it seems anyone arguing American manufacturers cant make a top notch SQ sub are simply biased, and wrong. No offense to your friend, everyone has a bias. Too bad his wasn't made more positive, but sadly I understand... we Americans can be such d*cks. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gif
Again, Im no subwoofer designer, but it seems to me a technological advance like BL optimization (American invention) would make a more audible difference, across a wider spectrum of install possibilities, than would subtle changes to the spider coatings. But then, as stated in this thread (by myself and others), a table-top BL curve isn't always preferred. *shrug* My point is everything has its place.
Im confident your European friend would think one of his hand built subs sounds superior to a driver who
factually outputs less distortion, at any/all levels... but then the arguement over whether SQ is subjective or not comes up. Who cares. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif Im sure your friend will make a comfortable living tweaking spiders, and American companies will continue improving their designs as well, and the vast majority of car audio 'enthusiasts' will still go out and buy whatever their cousin tells them "bumps the hardest".
Im not sure I completely agree, but again I do thank you for explaining your position better.