Sealed vs Ported vs High output bass reflex vs Passive radiator vs 4th and 6th order bandpass boxes

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  • čas přidán 3. 01. 2020
  • In this video we will see the measured results between 6 different enclosure types :
    Sealed
    Bass reflex
    High output ported
    Passive radiator
    4th order bandpass
    6th order bandpass
    The article about car resonant frequency : audiojudgement.com/resonant-fr...
    If you want to learn about how to make boxes like these you can check out my video courses on DIY audio : audiojudgement.com/courses.html
    Read more stuff like this : audiojudgement.com/
    Music Credits:
    "Werq" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
    "The Cannery" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 260

  • @Renrondog
    @Renrondog Před rokem +23

    Wow, the amount of effort to model and then build all these enclosures is phenomenal. You did an excellent job of both. I have always wondered what the differences would be in real life and not just computer software modeling, now I know. Thank you VERY MUCH for your effort and time and $$$$$$ spent on this educational exercise. The Best video on this subject by far!

  • @Mr.Robert1
    @Mr.Robert1 Před rokem +29

    At one point in my life I worked at wholesale car audio Warehouse. I had a ball playing with every single speaker, box, crossover, amplifier, head unit, Gadget that came into that place for the too years that I was there. It was a great learning experience, When I was ready to install my own system I knew exactly what I wanted made things a lot easier for me they would even let me borrow equipment and install it in my car. couldn't ask for anything more. Out of all the sales people that were there nobody really knew what was going on or was even into the equipment so when people would come into buy ,they would always come over to me.

    • @mcintosh.motors
      @mcintosh.motors Před rokem +3

      So, what’s your go to setup for subs? Bouncing between building a 4th order setup or passive radiator with a 10 and 15” setup

  • @mikewalker4950
    @mikewalker4950 Před 4 lety +72

    Great video! This is the first time I’ve actually seen someone model, build, and measure so many different enclosures. I’d love to see how a t-line compares!

    • @marioarchuleta8723
      @marioarchuleta8723 Před 4 lety +2

      Tttttttt lllliiinnnneeee .. Oh man .. I cant find nothing on youtube r any .. Thing than. Theory I swear . but i bet it sounds so dope

    • @TheLayinLo
      @TheLayinLo Před 3 lety +5

      There are a few videos. My own experiences with TLines were favorable. Put a 15” Skar VVX in one. That enclosure was somewhere around the +10 cu ft mark. Very flat response but nowhere near the output of a ported design 1/3 its size. I prefer other designs in car audio but my computer speakers are TQWT that I built. I get compliments on them often.

    • @rolandomota7474
      @rolandomota7474 Před rokem +1

      @@TheLayinLo what is TQWT

  • @evilinside5984
    @evilinside5984 Před rokem +4

    Have any of you tryed the Earthquake Slap's passive radiator's? The 10s, and 12s Slap's unit's, have 4 inches= 100 mm of Total= Peak to peak X Max, and the 15 inch Slap's, has 4 and a half inches= 112.5 mm of Total X Max! Plus the Slap's unit's, are designed to perform best in the active/powered subwoofer's mfg. rec. sealed enclosure size= not the ported size, like most people think. Also less cancellation will occur with the active driver(s), NOT on the same plane as the passive(s). The guy in this video did a great job, thank you very much, for taking the time, to do this video for us all❤️

  • @reganmorben9248
    @reganmorben9248 Před rokem +8

    Great explanation!
    Mostly confirmed what I thought I already knew, the thing I came to realize from this presentation is that I've never appreciated passive radiators enough.
    I've been building and installing car audio systems since the late 80s until the early 2000's (before I had to get a real job lol), and I was mainly trained by Orion and Pioneer (not a big pioneer fan, but boy, is their technical training ever good!) and to a lesser extent by the other companies that the various stores I worked for carried like MTX, Sony, SAS, Coustic, Eclipse, Nakamichi, Dennon, Clarion, etc. etc. etc...
    I even owned my own upholstery and car audio shop for a few years (super fun, but didn't make much money at it, turns out you cant charge for the full 37 hours you have into a pair of super custom, factory looking, leather wrapped Audi door pods that fit three 6" speakers and tweeters each).
    I understood that there were those vehicles out there that allowed you to have enclosure choices, that you needed the driver's TS parameters to calculate and design the optimal enclosure for that driver.
    My reality was that 99% of my customers wanted to put 10's and 12's (even 15's and 18's) behind and under seats where they would physically fit but there was nowhere near enough air space.
    So my reality was that I was almost always building enclosures for the vehicle not the driver. I mean, I really tried to get as much airspace as I could possibly get, I often used fibreglass bottoms and backs on my enclosures to conform as tightly as possible to the curvatures of the vehicle.
    There was some really impressive bass from small spaces and it was tight and clean and those customers rarely blew their subs and were usually pretty happy.
    When you sell and install the same gear over and over, you get a really good sense of what it should or can sound like in an optimal enclosure vs a small sealed enclosure. I always knew the sub woofers were limited by their small sealed airspace but that was the sacrifice that had to be made.
    Now that I understand passive radiators more, I really regret not having used them years ago in those small sealed enclosures that severely limited their sub woofers.
    My systems could have been so much better... So much better...

  • @TheLayinLo
    @TheLayinLo Před 3 lety +2

    I’ve been a huge fan of Audio Judgement, your website and blog, and have learned so much there. I’m really glad to see you with a CZcams channel. Much love and respect from a huge fan and colleague.

  • @dslynx
    @dslynx Před 2 lety +11

    Great video, just note that not only does the passive radiator allow for a smaller box, but it also eliminates chuffing if you have a large xmax.

  • @PhillipSanthosh
    @PhillipSanthosh Před 3 lety +2

    What I've been looking for many years has been explained in this video very explicitly.Great Job Marcus.Looking for more loudspeaker/enclosure related videos

  • @kapooranuj
    @kapooranuj Před 2 lety +4

    Very very scientific. I can also appreciate the effort, preparation, hours and expenses that would've gone into creating this video. Kudos

  • @tinysonaudio1408
    @tinysonaudio1408 Před 3 lety +9

    Great information! Very concise and well thought out. Love it when people can model AND build AND be extremely well spoken. Keep up the good work my friend!

  • @mackemacchiato3238
    @mackemacchiato3238 Před měsícem

    What a great video, editing, time spent and all the work with the boxes! Helpful and informative!!

  • @SmalltimR
    @SmalltimR Před 7 měsíci +2

    Great video!
    Absolutely love the attention to detail and time taken to explain every aspect of the tests - A+

  • @johnmachter40
    @johnmachter40 Před 7 měsíci +2

    that was of the greatest comparsion in the last decade. big thank you

  • @Elmojomo
    @Elmojomo Před 3 lety +11

    Fantastic video! You actually explained many concepts that I've been struggling to understand for a while now. Very nice presentation and editing as well. I appreciate the little bits of humor here and there also. You just got a new sub (scriber, not woofer, lol) from this video. ;)

  • @philipeli1192
    @philipeli1192 Před 4 měsíci +1

    In the old days hanging your amps upside down caused them to run hot! I was taught that any position except upside down was ok. You spent a lot of time here,good job.

  • @joshhaimes
    @joshhaimes Před 2 lety +9

    I've just recently come across your channel and I must say it is awesome. Thanks for making these great, informative videos. The amount of time you put into the videos is incredible! I have two comments on the video. First is that most people tune their ported boxes higher. 22.5 is crazy low for car audio. I know you were going for the flat response, but most people would tune in the 28-34 range in favor of output. Second thing is that these boxes all have different group delay so they will sound different. Output and box size isn't the whole story IMO.

  • @catalinvintila947
    @catalinvintila947 Před 4 lety +1

    Super! Ai explicat foarte bine diferențele dintre respectivele tipuri de boxe. Foarte folositoare lecția!

  • @DavidCakl1
    @DavidCakl1 Před 3 lety +2

    Wow! best enclosure video on youtube. You got my subscribe.
    From all boxes, passive radiator is most satisfying. Its small efficient and have a nice low end and SQ. Really impressed!

  • @liveTwoFish
    @liveTwoFish Před 4 lety

    Excellent job on this video! Info was presented perfectly!

  • @speedpros
    @speedpros Před 2 lety +1

    That was fun and informative, I've never seen all those different boxes or had them explained very carefully. Thanks

  • @srarcade
    @srarcade Před 2 lety +1

    Great job testing and providing so much data, this is really helpful for over-analytical types like us to come to decisions.

  • @ashishkushwaha3812
    @ashishkushwaha3812 Před 4 lety +3

    Very detailed explanation. Answered most of my questions..

  • @deathwixh108
    @deathwixh108 Před 3 lety +1

    this is the comparison video i looking for. glad u explained it all in here. thanks

  • @AdnanKhan-eh5sy
    @AdnanKhan-eh5sy Před 4 lety +3

    Hi, this is awesome !!!! waiting for new course, it has been very long since last 201.

  • @tyjohnson4558
    @tyjohnson4558 Před 4 lety +2

    That's awesome man you put a lot of time into that it's appreciated

  • @michaelheadley172
    @michaelheadley172 Před 3 lety

    THANKS FOR EXPLAINING ISOBARIK SPEAKERS AND DECIDING HOW TO ASCERTAIN SPEAKER BOX CONFIGURATIONS !

  • @simagrisiute9192
    @simagrisiute9192 Před 2 lety +2

    Man head down .Best video on this topic

  • @srtdoff01
    @srtdoff01 Před 4 lety +2

    wow wow wow.. Truly awesome work!! Great explanation. I hope you get a lot more views and can share this knowledge because it will help many people. Awesome 👍🏼 Thank you!!

  • @fishrsa9046
    @fishrsa9046 Před 3 lety

    very interesting video, i didn't even know about bandpass enclosures. your explanations are very clear and easy to understand

  • @roevatanas
    @roevatanas Před 3 lety

    Very interesting channel. Professionally and understandably presented information. Well done mate.👍🙂❤

  • @style_of_mag6069
    @style_of_mag6069 Před 4 lety +4

    Awesome video! I've watched all your courses on Udemy you've helped me a lot :)

  • @michaelfrancis1
    @michaelfrancis1 Před 2 lety

    Cheers from Texas!
    🤘😎🤘
    Thank you for doing this. My son and I have always been interested in cabinet design.
    Fascinating!
    All the best
    M

  • @kelvinrandolph4466
    @kelvinrandolph4466 Před 4 lety +2

    This is an awesome video...THANKS MAN!!

  • @audfrknaveen2256
    @audfrknaveen2256 Před 3 lety

    Awesome video and wonderful explanation !!!

  • @keatonjones6115
    @keatonjones6115 Před 4 lety +10

    Ive been looking so hard for some info/comparisons like this for a while! thanks a heap, epic work!

  • @shean-koklim4197
    @shean-koklim4197 Před 3 lety

    good effort,appreciate your time and knowledge.

  • @rudsutin7354
    @rudsutin7354 Před 3 lety

    appreciated your work, you really work hard for this video.. great job sir

  • @mutatedgenome
    @mutatedgenome Před 3 lety

    Nice video. Thanks for your efforts.

  • @adityachauhan703
    @adityachauhan703 Před 4 lety

    Really great work

  • @mhnoni
    @mhnoni Před 9 dny

    Really great information, thank you!

  • @AliBekirKlckaya
    @AliBekirKlckaya Před 3 lety

    Very nice and funny presentation, thanks! :)

  • @CartmanVlaams
    @CartmanVlaams Před 3 lety

    Outstanding work!! :O

  • @sarulful
    @sarulful Před 4 lety

    Very nice explanation.. Thanks a lot..

  • @chuckymystic
    @chuckymystic Před rokem +1

    i have a 10w6v3 its such an amazing speaker.

  • @henrycaldwell238
    @henrycaldwell238 Před 2 lety +2

    well remember the cabin gains, that is almost the exact gains added to the 4th order. I was hoping you would catch that. Overlaying the car gain and the 4th order.

  • @vikassm
    @vikassm Před 3 lety

    Fantastic Video!

  • @johnviera3884
    @johnviera3884 Před 2 lety

    Amazing video. This is how you do it.

  • @CooperateMind
    @CooperateMind Před 3 lety

    Nice work, keep going

  • @mateuswild3364
    @mateuswild3364 Před 4 lety +1

    incredible job, you deserve all the merits!
    Greetings from Brazil

  • @martinda7446
    @martinda7446 Před rokem

    Your videos are absolutely wonderful, I admire your effort and understanding of the physics involved.
    Bose had, as usual, an ingenious way of supplementing bass in a tiny enclosure. Dr Bose was a true goddamn genius, check out his MIT acoustics course free online. I hope it is still there.
    I can't imagine adding to the nasty honk the car is already giving you.. 😁.
    Annoying comment follows:
    After living with Quad 57s for over 40 years (I have been in the audio industry this long) almost every box sounds horrible. Best having no box at all. ProAc Response 4s were one of my favourite 'boxes' that spring to mind.
    Stanley Lipschitz is someone anyone interested in speakers and audio should be aware of if they share the view cabinets are a (un) necessary evil. He can elevate your understanding of speakers, boxes and drive units, filtering etc to somewhere well beyond the norm. Bose is the pragmatic, physics based genius. Not sure I like the sound of his speakers though.

  • @2002ZRX1200R
    @2002ZRX1200R Před 3 lety

    Don't forget to factor Le into the response graphs, and reducing port volume increases enclosure net volume, which is something that has to be factored to tweak tuning by modding the ports on already built enclosures. It's also worth noting that horns cause horn resonance. Also the parameters of a driver will control it's ability to play below fs, and ebp will determine which enclosure type is needed for the flattest amplitude in bandwidth.

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah, well, these are subwoofers so I don't particularly care about Le effect. You can see on the measured responses, at the end, that the graphs are up until 135 Hz and there is no roll-off happening. What happens to the frequencies above that point doesn't really concerns this test.

  • @johnd5542
    @johnd5542 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow, I dont think most people understand the amount of work and knowledge you put into making that video. Great comparison and awsome editing.
    To the "know it all commenters".....make your own video.

  • @VINNY5674
    @VINNY5674 Před 3 lety +1

    I've always loved my bandpass box it really had a intense Thump in my suv.
    And my subs at home are passive I get really crazy lows for movies.
    I am throwing my sub in a ported box tomorrow in the suv as an experiment I know my mirrors are gonna shift like crazy...

    • @clittle1559
      @clittle1559 Před rokem

      I've always loved 4th order bandpass in the 90s and 2000s seem to make the sub hit lower and able to take more power from one sealed area

  • @BRSJoey
    @BRSJoey Před rokem

    Thanks for this VIDEO 😉

  • @chaconWOOOOOO
    @chaconWOOOOOO Před 2 lety

    Thanks for a great video

  • @user-ce6wt8cw3i
    @user-ce6wt8cw3i Před 7 měsíci

    Great video!

  • @eccentric363
    @eccentric363 Před 2 lety

    excellent video !

  • @1804ars
    @1804ars Před rokem

    Nice work 👍.

  • @dmitriibugayov6975
    @dmitriibugayov6975 Před měsícem

    Great video!!!! Thank you a lot!!

  • @natashacrawford4146
    @natashacrawford4146 Před 3 lety

    your video is very informative nd very interesting

  • @austintyler7991
    @austintyler7991 Před 3 lety

    I'm really learning. Thanks a bunch Got Morel Ultimo SC 12" inch sub 10hz-900 range. Can I build a 6th order for 16-20hz low & 30-34hz high ? Wonder if to big for truck of car? 40"x18"x 24" is about as big as I can go. Thanks brother

  • @ramilrodriguez8340
    @ramilrodriguez8340 Před 3 lety

    Hi. Great experiment. I have an 43L enclosure but driver I have ask for optimum volumes of 55L sealed and 161L vented. The resonant frequency of the driver in 24hz. What’s my best option if I use that speaker in that enclosure? Can I just make a port tuned to lets say 28hz and get decent results even when not optimal or what? Thanks.

  • @braydenhancock3907
    @braydenhancock3907 Před rokem +2

    so far i think im either going to go for a full size sealed, or a passive small, i dont like messing with ports because i seem to always mess up ports.

  • @shaneclk9854
    @shaneclk9854 Před 3 lety

    Excellent video excellente

  • @kenso.1
    @kenso.1 Před 2 lety

    the more i learn, the more i dont want to invest any more into building boxes. too many variables and unaccounted engineering to spoil the party. good thing space is always my leading constraint. GREAT video and presentation!

  • @Eman0576
    @Eman0576 Před 3 lety

    Great explanation, it would be great if you include the sound of each enclosure so we can hear the difference

    • @orangejjay
      @orangejjay Před 2 lety +1

      How would you capture that in a CZcams video? Would require one helluva microphone and also your own setup would have to accommodate it. When then, compression would likely remove any accuracy or noticeable difference.

  • @jonathanginofilippi
    @jonathanginofilippi Před rokem

    Great video

  • @mkatalin09
    @mkatalin09 Před 4 lety +3

    That sub that u choose for the demo is perfect for a sealed enclosure because the Qts is greater then 0.4 and smaller then 0.7!
    Otherwise this is a great video

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 4 lety

      You are absolutely right! And my next video will be about that : Which enclosure is best suited for my driver. But, then again, don't get hung up on these intervals. The extremes are always right. For example a Qts of 0.25 is definitely not good for infinite baffle and a Qts of 1.1 is very bad for a bass reflex. But numbers in the middle can work well with most enclosures. These intervals are guidelines, not strict rules.

  • @ivanvitor8225
    @ivanvitor8225 Před rokem

    Thanks for information.
    how would be in transmission line enclosure??

  • @audfrknaveen2256
    @audfrknaveen2256 Před 3 lety +1

    In terms of clarity, or accuracy, or transient responce or fast bass for instrumentals drum beats which enclosure is better ??? Sealed is popular opinion and then bass reflex, and then remaining designs. Hope this is right ??

  • @igor2030ign
    @igor2030ign Před 3 lety +3

    Nice work. Very appreciated. Fyi: TL sub and rear, front loaded horn or folded horn will easy kill all this kind of enclosures!

    • @inkmonster0u812
      @inkmonster0u812 Před 3 lety +1

      Site to explain? Not sure what you mean. I.m building a box for a single 18 in evl. 2 om.

    • @igor2030ign
      @igor2030ign Před 3 lety +2

      @@inkmonster0u812 The transmission line and horn are more efficient and more bass effective enclosures.
      czcams.com/video/aV1wSLTrX4g/video.html
      This may explain abit more.... Try to build and when you hear the difference you understand this by your ears....

    • @igor2030ign
      @igor2030ign Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/KCZ9ZYqAS6U/video.html

    • @John3K21
      @John3K21 Před 2 lety +1

      @@igor2030ign Thank you for linking these videos. I just finished watching both of them. For me it's a perfect example of "you don't know what you've been looking for until you've found it." I'm really interested in learning about more efficient builds, and horn style builds is something that just hadn't caught my attention yet. I've seen HexiBase talk about them before, but so far 6th order and 8th order enclosures are all that really stood out to me more before now. THIS is cool.

    • @John3K21
      @John3K21 Před 2 lety +1

      @@igor2030ign Just so you know, I've been hooked on watching MBEnclosures videos ever since you linked his videos above. Haha. Dude knows his stuff about box building for sure.

  • @dunnbizzy79
    @dunnbizzy79 Před 2 lety

    We need more videos on this

  • @wwlittlejOfficial
    @wwlittlejOfficial Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome vid! Cleared up a few misconceptions fur me. But I really want to know more about passive radiator xes, how do u determine size of radiators, how many radiators and size of box vs free respiratory nose. Since they are small boxes, I imagine many times we have wiggle room to make a box bigger, how does that affect response/output?

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 2 lety

      You just use a modeling software, like WinISD. Change the parameters you mentioned and see how that affects the response.

    • @wwlittlejOfficial
      @wwlittlejOfficial Před 2 lety

      @@AudioJudgement Lol, already on it!

  • @JonathanDFielding
    @JonathanDFielding Před 2 lety +1

    Small Bluetooth speakers also use passive radiators so that the speaker can remain sealed in case it gets wet

  • @CharlesK441
    @CharlesK441 Před rokem

    Great video. Shame the testing was hampered by the opening to the car cabin area. Would it be worth testing indoors for a closer comparison now the ca test is done?

  • @SteveTheCanadian
    @SteveTheCanadian Před 3 lety

    Not gonna lie, you had me on the first part haha if it was just a computer comparison, no mas.

  • @drrock5356
    @drrock5356 Před 3 lety

    What about porting the ported enclosures through the "ski pass-through"? I'm trying to do something like this with my GS400, where the port would be located and fire directly under the 10" hole in the rear deck, where the factory subwoofer was removed, so that those soothing pressure waves can travel into the car. The sealed box I built sounds great when the trunk is open, and I'm standing behind the car, but not much bass makes it into the cabin space.

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 3 lety +1

      You know you can make the port stick out of the enclosure, right? We don't do that because it looks awkward, but in this case it's perfect. Also, if the port is not inside the box, the box can be smaller. Furthermore, I suggest a 4th order bandpass enclosure where you have just the port radiating sound.

  • @ambulldog111
    @ambulldog111 Před 3 lety

    Great work thank you for your video....I would like to hear your opinion on which box sounded best in your vehicle and which you would run with in your personal situation?

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 3 lety

      Depends on what you are after. To me the sealed box sounded best. If you are a basshead the 6th order BP sounded loud but still linear in its playable range.

    • @RAW_Reality
      @RAW_Reality Před 3 lety

      @@AudioJudgement Just curious, but how do you upscale the volume of an enclosure when making a 6th order bandpass? Is there a calculation adjustment that specifies "what the difference between a 4th and 6th order should be"? If the Vas of a sub was, for example, 25.50 L, what would then be the "ideal" enclosure size for a 6th order?
      Furthermore, what dictates or specifies where to put a baffle in a 6th order? I've seen them anything from nearly a 1:1 to a 3:1 ratio...

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 3 lety +1

      @@RAW_Reality There is no such thing as volume ratios when it comes to BP4 and BP6 enclosures. This is probably something invented on some forum a long time ago, and passed on. To calculate the volumes you use a modeling software, like WinISD, input the speaker parameters and adjust the box parameters until you find a satisfactory response. The resulting volumes don’t follow any ratio.

    • @RAW_Reality
      @RAW_Reality Před 3 lety

      @@AudioJudgement Thanks for the input, and good to know. 👍

  • @hotdog9262
    @hotdog9262 Před měsícem

    would be interesting to see a `small` plugged ported box freq response and db. ive done some testing with different density plugs with good results. so a happy(?) medium of sealed and bassreflex

  • @noobsterqmdhere
    @noobsterqmdhere Před 2 lety

    what if a dual active sub push pull sealed design ?
    mutliple drivers ported ? / mutliple driver sealed ?/ mutliple drivers with bass radiator as thicc or larger surface and heavier cone ?
    or basiclly made the same thing as this but with 2 or more active drivers ?
    looking foward to see more about mutliple drivers n passive radiators

  • @trev6783
    @trev6783 Před 3 lety +4

    I really want to learn more about passive radiators.. It just seems like there is a huge lack of knowledge about them except for the super top secret labs of major audio brands. How do you tune them? What size do you need? What does the suspension compliance do? Can you just tack some radiators on to the side of an already built sealed box?

    • @Mr.Robert1
      @Mr.Robert1 Před rokem +2

      passive radiator does a great job as opposed to using a port if you have the room it does an amazing job although a lot of people just add another woofer as opposed to a passive radiator when it comes to a car I had some home speakers that look like they had two 10-in woofers in each box until one of them blew when I took them apart to repair that's when I found out that it had one 10-in woofer and one passive that speaker had tremendous sound coming out of it considering it was only one 10-in woofer thing sounded great and it was an off-brand piece of junk

    • @Forcefed2002
      @Forcefed2002 Před 5 měsíci

      Typically u need twice the surface area worth of PR as the active driver. You tune the PR by adding weight (steel washers) to the rear suspension section of the PR

    • @trev6783
      @trev6783 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Forcefed2002 Why do you need twice the surface area? I mean what would happen if you added let's say hypothetically, 2 12 inch PR's to a sealed box with 2 15's. Would the tuning be so far off that it would sound bad? would they just over extend? Can you compensate with extra weight?

    • @Forcefed2002
      @Forcefed2002 Před 5 měsíci

      @@trev6783 I don't know - it's just the most common alignment used when enlisting PR's. It's just how it's modeled for a satisfactory freq response curve.

  • @jesusfloresjuarez6739
    @jesusfloresjuarez6739 Před 4 lety +1

    Hi from México I have 3 15" Dbxi earthquake.
    My friend Wich is an ing. Expert in audio, designed 2 boxes for each one, a sealed and a ported.
    The ported has an aero port of 6" diameter and 15" deep and is enormous, my first thought was that I could not listen to jazz music. But surprise, jazz music sounds better than the sealed box.
    At 20 herz the sealed is terrible bad.
    I made my proofs using the same amp and same equ and same power.
    So for me I prefer the ported box, just if it is well designed.

    • @Skarfar90
      @Skarfar90 Před 4 lety

      I've made a few hybrid transmission-line boxes (pressure chamber followed by a long folded port). All of them have been very good for a wide variety of music, being everything from rock to dubstep.

  • @koky179
    @koky179 Před rokem

    I need custom box like you have but need to be it smaller im looking at tops 8inch 600wrms or 6.5 400wrms i want loud and deep bass just for listening

  • @worldwideteambasscatdownri6963

    You can cut slot ports, just use screws & no glue til you are done tuning

  • @furieux6742
    @furieux6742 Před 3 lety

    I found it, I think the movie is cool! Just nice if you test bigger speakers :) 12 "15" inch subwoofers. :). I think that the difference would not be that big, especially since the small speaker by nature does not sound low, especially 30-40Hz, and such 12-15 inches can even reach 35Hz, even though the subwoofer is closed :) I have a pride lp 15 and in a closed 78L sounds incredibly low, 30hz is not a problem, and the pressure is already strong at 35-37hz :)

  • @drrckhamilton
    @drrckhamilton Před 3 lety

    Hey, I am curious. Have you ever made a video showing how to calibrate a microphone with the mic calibrator and how this works with REW? I have a microphone that doesn't have a calibration file so I have no idea how to do this. Any help would be greatly appreciated. You have already helped tremendously as I am doing an sq build. Thanks again

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 3 lety

      You need specialized equipment for that. You will have to search for a company that calibrates microphones and they will make the file for you.

    • @orangejjay
      @orangejjay Před 2 lety

      You can buy one that's calibrated. Umik-1 comes with a flash drive that includes calibration files, for example.

    • @drrckhamilton
      @drrckhamilton Před 2 lety

      @@orangejjay
      Yeah I have an awesome microphone now. I bought one that was not calibrated back then because of price

  • @Clobercow1
    @Clobercow1 Před 3 lety +1

    Now... Lets see a clamshell isobarick 6th order bandpass box :)

  • @AaronPotokar-ky4cz
    @AaronPotokar-ky4cz Před měsícem

    I have a ported box tuned to 34 hz and a DB WDX12G2.4 with a skar audio RP2000.1D in a 2005 Scion xB. I just can not get my tuning right do you have any tips for me? Thank you. New at this

  • @krowwithakay
    @krowwithakay Před 2 lety

    I like using passives rather than ports to avoid port noise (chuffing) mostly in my smaller boxes

  • @Skarfar90
    @Skarfar90 Před 4 lety +3

    How would a transmission line (T-line) box fit in to all this. Its main goal is to have a wide frequency band like a sealed enclosure, but with higher output due to being a ported enclosure

    • @TheLayinLo
      @TheLayinLo Před 3 lety

      I don’t think you would see a higher output. That’s just based on my personal experience with them. You can achieve a very wide and frequency band that is very linear. If it was built properly and stuffed and remeasured and adjusted until optimal, I think you’d see response that is similar but more favorable to the sealed box. BUT the enclosure would be larger.

    • @Skarfar90
      @Skarfar90 Před 3 lety

      @@TheLayinLo Yes, that would make sense, as you need a lot of space to make up the line.
      So, for small spaces, sealed or passive radiators is the better option

    • @johnnycorn7225
      @johnnycorn7225 Před 3 lety

      Sounds like you need a third order horn enclosure like they use at concerts there's nothing like it.

  • @jtmcfarland3512
    @jtmcfarland3512 Před 11 měsíci

    It would be nice to see a part 2 where you do the same test again with the same subwoofer in the same boxes now that the speaker has been fully broken in. I’ve heard 6th order enclosures and some 4th order types can come out of tune with the box after use. I understand it depends on the sub how long it takes to age and there are other variables, but it’s still a concern for me.

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 11 měsíci

      Indeed when the speaker is broken-in, the resonant frequency of the speaker goes down a bit. However, this speaker was playing in my car for years, before I did this comparison.

  • @1972lesteryan
    @1972lesteryan Před 3 lety

    great video. what softwear do you use to design subwoofer boxes ?

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 3 lety +1

      I like using WinISD. It's free and it has all that you could ask for.

    • @1972lesteryan
      @1972lesteryan Před 3 lety

      @@AudioJudgement awesome and thank you for the quick reply.

  • @hippo-potamus
    @hippo-potamus Před 3 lety

    Apart from the consideration of being able to access the subwoofer, is there any difference which part of the subwoofer is in the sealed chamber of the 4th order?

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 3 lety

      It doesn't make any difference. Only thing you need to worry about is that you need to add the volume displaced by the magnet to the corresponding chamber.

  • @audioelectronics542
    @audioelectronics542 Před 3 lety

    which type of enclosure is best for deep bass
    please tell me ported ,band pass or passive radiator
    does passive radiators are better for deep bass??

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 3 lety

      With a good driver, any of the 3 enclosures can reach deep bass. In most cases bass reflex is the way to go.

  • @clementc7297
    @clementc7297 Před 4 lety

    Very nice video. Sadly you did point out phase linearity

  • @TrungNguyen-bd1kl
    @TrungNguyen-bd1kl Před 3 lety

    So what’s the best box

  • @MarvinConnell
    @MarvinConnell Před 11 měsíci

    VERY HELPFUL DATA - THANK YOU - but I'm having trouble understanding the 'In Car' frequency response, because there does not seem to be any Cabin Gain... In fact, there seems to be a 'cabin loss', because the frequency response of the 'flat' curve ported version falls as said frequency gets lower... O.O But I may have an idea as to the cause... When modelling a subwoofer, the Transfer Function Magnitude Graph doesn't give you all the facts - at least not as much as the SPL Graph, which shows you the theoretical output of the sub, whilst catering to the MAXIMUM EXCURSION of the driver... With that in mind, if the xmax is reached at a relatively high frequency - say 45Hz in regards to the ported version - then the projected 'flat' response will fall short\decline as the frequencies being played get lower, & either the amp runs out of the power needed to maintain the same volume with those frequencies(I know that's not the case - just saying), or, the sub's ability to play any louder diminishes as it's xmax is exceeded... >.> So which is it? Why is there no indication of cabin gain? & why isn't there a bump in the response curve at the car's resonance frequency with all enclosure versions? O.O

  • @matt6951
    @matt6951 Před rokem

    Could you make a 6th order with passive radiators?

  • @vernarddevilliers7899
    @vernarddevilliers7899 Před 4 lety

    So is the ideal placement for a single radiator directly behind the driver? If so, why do most boxes have them on the side or the front?

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 4 lety +1

      It's not the ideal position. You can place it on whatever panel. It doesn't really matter. If you have 2, you must place them on opposite panels. However, if you have only one, the position is determined for aesthetic purposes mainly.

  • @antro_oner
    @antro_oner Před 2 lety

    I'm running 1100watts through two 12's and can't pass 116... back to the drawing board.
    Great video and info!!

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 2 lety

      my guess is that you're measurement equipment might be faulty. 116 dB can be reached with almost any subwoofer, let alone 2x12 with 1kw of power.

    • @antro_oner
      @antro_oner Před 2 lety

      @@AudioJudgement I don't think you're wrong, it's a cell phone app. I have seen the same app read others higher, then again I went with 28"2 of port area. I have great depth but the numbers aren't there. I guess this is beauty of car audio. Build, test, repeat.

    • @AudioJudgement
      @AudioJudgement  Před 2 lety

      You can't measure SPL with a phone. Even specialized measurement microphones cap out at 130 dB. Some fancy ones can measure above 130 dB but not by much. You will need a sound pressure sensor to measure. Your setup probably exceeds 140 dB. Stop using your phone. You're better off judging the SPL using you ears.

    • @antro_oner
      @antro_oner Před 2 lety

      @@AudioJudgement this makes me feel much better. After watching you do 127db on 256 watts, I was shattered.
      Thanks for the feedback. Thank you for the knowledge.