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I can only answer your first question. I've got the RS5 in a monitor sized and also XRS cabinets. Going to the XRS from the smaller cabinet, one doesn't lose anything. The sound is very similar just with a little more foundation and also a slightly warmer midrange (which could be due to the wider cabinet). For me, nothing is lost by going to the larger cabinet. The difference between the two is tangible, but not a drastic change.
If you want more 'body' with the smaller enclosures, move it closer to the floor and point up. You may be surprised at how much you gain. I do wonder how much of the floor standers' increased bass and mids came from the driver being closer to the ground, and how much due to the enclosure size.
Any cone speaker driver has a box volume range, min, optimum and max.Seems the max range will delivery more bass.Over the max litrage there is a risk of increasing the cone excursion beyond the Xmax.In extreme cases of large boxes it may occur the VC beat up with the motor bottom or magnet plate.
That is a good point UL.There should be no logical difference in bass output between the Super 3U and the Super 3XRS based solely on cabinet volume with identical tuning. However, we intuitively assume bass gain for the XRS for a number of reasons: wider baffle extending to the floor, which changes the radiation pattern closer half and even quarter space (in contrast to the full space radiation pattern of a stand-mounted monitor), and the wider baffle which shifts the baffle step frequency a bit lower. I'm not sure how much real world difference the shift from a 8" wide baffle to a 11" baffle makes in that context. With the narrower baffle we would expect to see the baffle step at 570Hz, while with the wider one we would expect it to occur at 414Hz. That difference alone would imply a fairly significant effect in the vocal range, especially in male vocals. I would expect it to be more full-bodied.Additionally, in the XRS the port is located close to the floor. We are again radiating into quarter space and taking advantage of coupling to the floor and to a greater or lesser extent the front wall depending on positioning.With the renewed interest in Louis' 1.5 way models, it has made me begin to think more deeply about the different configurations possible. In looking at his "sold" Outlaw models, I note that more have the two drivers located physically very close (about 5.5" CTC or so), with one exception: an older, larger 1.5 RS5 model with a Super Alnico Monitor sized cabinet. This speaker had the drivers about 10" CTC. At a 500hz cutoff frequency, conventional wisdom dictates that we locate drivers with 1/4 wavelength, or no more than 6.5". The greater distance is closer to 1/2 wavelength.Is there an opinion about the maximum distance between the drivers where they will still present as a point source? Our listening distance will almost always be much greater than this distance (l) and a rule of thumb asserts that at distances greater than 1/2 the radiation pattern will behave like a point source. At higher frequencies (>1khz) , we are concerned about comb filtering but at the frequencies below 500hz ripple from baffle diffraction and/or room effects would likely overshadow any comb filtering. It could be that locating the second RS5 driver closer to the floor could further reinforce the bass while still maintaining the effect of a point source.