You can put a divider down the port without effecting too much.
Doubling up the panel thickness will help a lot too.
Thanks. I had thought about a divider down the center of the port but was worried about two issues. First was the fact that it would displace some of the port volume and second has to do with wave action when it flows around an obstacle.
The second concern is based on my knowledge of water flow rather than sound waves. When a flowing current of water meets an obstacle such as a bridge piling in the center of the river it splits and passes over the leading edge smoothly. However, when it passes over the back end of the obstruction it does not recombine smoothly. The current is turbulent, swirls, and even flows backwards in a small area (eddy current).
What do you think about designing the divider so it is rounded at the leading edge and tapers to the trailing end, sort of an elongated teardrop shape? Should the divider be a short piece (3"-4") in the center of the panel or should it extend all the way to the mouth of the port?
Should I make the port length longer to compensate for the divider's displacement or will it be negligible?