89GMCSuburban
1/2 ton status
My fosgate was box rated at 700 watts, but the bench test slip that all fosgates had showed mine bench rated at 846 watts.

chevyin said:Again, cone size has virtually nothing to do with how 'muddy' or 'slow' the speaker will react. Read the link I provided, it explains it in thorough detail. For example, I bet you didn't realize many home pro audio systems utilize 15-18" midrange drivers, did you?
If you guys want to discuss what really changes transient response of a sub system, you should be focusing on the enclosure type/size/alignment, and how the motor reacts to the amount of current passing through it. If you want to discuss the performance of a sub's transient response based on the cone size, you are barking up the wrong tree totally.
That tech article was written by Dan Wiggins of Adire Audio, considered one of the leaders in speaker design today (was the main force in develpoing the new motor topology called xbl^2). Just to give you some background on the author.Greg72 said:That Adire site seems to be drawing some dubious conclusions about inductance vs. mass???
Comparing the test data to the signal material would prove nothing in this test, which I assume is why Dan left it out. These tests are to compare the speaker when 1) mass is added, and 2) when the inductance of the coil is changed. The comparison that needed to be done was the speaker with those two criteria compared to the speaker with no mass or inductance added. In other words, the test was simply to see the effects of adding weight and/or inductance, then compare it to the original speaker's response to find out which actually affects transient response. This is what Dan did, and his results showed inductance was in fact the cause of variation in transient response, rather than mass. The test speaker could have been a top quality unit that reproduced the original source material faithfully, or it could have been a cheap WalMart speaker whose response was sloppy. It doesn't matter, that's not the point of the article, its to see how changing two specific specs will affects the speaker's performance (in relation to no changes added).Greg72 said:Source Signal - Where is the reference signal that the speaker was given to reproduce? It's hard to appreciate the "accuracy" or "transient response" of a speaker when you can't see how faithfully it reproduces the original signal.
You must have missed the part where he said he did in fact double the moving mass of the speaker: "Added mass was 28.5 grams (Mms of the Extremis 6-8 is 24.39 grams per Kilppel)"Greg72 said:Mass - Adding 28grams (less than 1 ounce) of mass to a speaker cone hardly proves that mass is an irrelevant factor. Double the weight of the cone (for example) and re-test... Even with only a small added weight the speaker (this is the blue line in the graph, as far as I can tell) did not seem to track very impressively to the other response pulses.
Why do you say unfairly? The point of that tech article is to prove exactly that, that mass really isn't a factor, inductance is. If Dan had simply written a paragraph stating this opinion, Id agree it was unfair. But, he took the time to show the equations and explain the logic, step by step. I certainly wouldn't call it unfair, Id call it proven. *shrug*Greg72 said:I can appreciate that overcoming a high voice coil inductance may be a real issue, but the article seems to state (unfairly) that mass is not a consideration...

More power is not always a good thing, not in speaker motors. There is such a thing as 'overmotored', a sub that produces more BL force than is necessary, thereby hurting it in other areas (T/S specs are all about compromises between each of them... raise one thing excessively and another spec will be ill-affected). Designing a sub is like walking a tight-rope. For example, you can have 2 of the 3 following: small enclosure size, efficiency, and low end response.... but you cannot have all three. Add massive amounts of BL force (motor force) and the driver's Qes will suffer, which will make low end response suffer (but midbass will be like its on steroids). Speaker design is a give and take, unlike your analogy of a motor in truck where more power is almost always beneficial, in a speaker, this is not always the case.Greg72 said:I guess the closest analogy I can muster is:
Low Inductance = Crisp Throttle Response
Cone Mass = Vehicle Weight
It's nice to have the crisp throtle response, but ultimately it still has to move whatever weight the car has.... and it will still struggle against that mass until it gets it moving.
The analogy may not be perfect, but in either case...more power is a good thing. A lazy-sounding speaker can really come alive with a healthy dose of power....just as a 6000Lb Blazer could conceivably run a 12-second 1/4 mile with enough motor!!!!
). This is similar to the effect of mass on the speaker's motion. The amount of force involved here (generally in the 2-4hp range for most modern subs) greatly overshadows the few gram difference you would experience going from one size to another within a speaker model. But, what would affect your fists' "transient response" would be the amount of energy you put into shaking your hands back and forth (this would be the inductance in a speaker's motor, the moving force).
Most people would call infinite baffle the most accurate, when done correctly, as it offers no coloration due to enclosure alignment. And low tuned ported boxes can sound very very good. But in general yes most sealed systems offer superior sound quality to most vented systems. Vented systems have group delay issues that sealed systems do not, if nothing else.MrArmyAnt said:Ported = harder, louder, harder to tune, innacurate. Enclose (sealed) = most accurate, easiest to build, not loudest.