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XXX vs. MX
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<blockquote data-quote="audioholic" data-source="post: 2749420" data-attributes="member: 549629"><p>I can tell you are not an engineer, or even remotely close. A speaker's spider plays a specific role, it restricts motion. That motion is predictable, the forces on the cone and spider are predictable, and you've simply fallen for some voodoo someone told you.</p><p>Or, can you even suggest one single facet of a subwoofer's normal operating conditions that cannot be explained mathematically, predicted before hand and prepared for?</p><p></p><p>This is not rocket science, its not voodoo, and its not sculpting. It is predictable physics, science, math. Everything else is just witch-doctory.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="audioholic, post: 2749420, member: 549629"] I can tell you are not an engineer, or even remotely close. A speaker's spider plays a specific role, it restricts motion. That motion is predictable, the forces on the cone and spider are predictable, and you've simply fallen for some voodoo someone told you. Or, can you even suggest one single facet of a subwoofer's normal operating conditions that cannot be explained mathematically, predicted before hand and prepared for? This is not rocket science, its not voodoo, and its not sculpting. It is predictable physics, science, math. Everything else is just witch-doctory. [/QUOTE]
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