0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 4848 times.
Mr. Haskins,Are you speaking to something that is on your site?
Kevin,You could probably do the same design without the slot port, add 100% fill and make it a sealed unit, right? You will lose out in maximum spl and you may gain something in the transient response. Your Tempest X2 should do fine in a 5.5-6 cubic foot enclosure with 100% fill and a 500-1000 watt amp...Anand.
I know there is some controversy over sevice issues, but this product would be very tough to beat for the price. As long as its in stock should be no problem.MFW15http://www.av123.com//index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=shop.flypage&product_id=476&category_id=9&manufacturer_id=0&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=37
Quote from: Nick77 on 9 Dec 2009, 07:30 pmI know there is some controversy over sevice issues, but this product would be very tough to beat for the price. As long as its in stock should be no problem.MFW15http://www.av123.com//index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=shop.flypage&product_id=476&category_id=9&manufacturer_id=0&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=37Some controversy is an understatement. Kevin's product's/design's are hard to beat (and only then by ID companies such as - Hsu, SVS, TSC, Epik, eD, Aperion, etc.)
Quote from: poseidonsvoice on 9 Dec 2009, 10:34 pmKevin,You could probably do the same design without the slot port, add 100% fill and make it a sealed unit, right? You will lose out in maximum spl and you may gain something in the transient response. Your Tempest X2 should do fine in a 5.5-6 cubic foot enclosure with 100% fill and a 500-1000 watt amp...Anand.Yea... in all of my driver designs we have the T/S parameters worked out so that they can be used in either ported or sealed. The tradeoff you make going sealed is that you lose all the port output. For Home Theater Applications that is a bad choice because people want to feel all the action. For 2-channel use you just don't need the same output at 20Hz. Hell... 30Hz is often good enough for enjoying a good 2-channel system. You can actually cut the enclosure size by about 1/3rd for sealed designs and get very musical results. If it is a system that is dual purpose though, you are better off keeping it ported because the HT experience is vastly improved by the extra output in the first octave. They are still musical but there are some recordings that are mastered poorly and the LF capability is actually a negative. Room measurements and EQ are important....I'd even say critical for getting good 2-channel results. A couple bands of PEQ and a measurement system can make an absolutely HUGE difference in the integration of a sub so that is something where the HT crowd is ahead of audiophiles in terms of sound quality.
hello,this is in your budget and is one of the best.http://www.epiksubwoofers.com/portedsentinel.htmlthere is a reason why they are out of stock.
Get a couple of yamaha yst sw315 (~$185 each at jr.com)... and they should be more than enough for your room. Cheap, yet great performance. Or you can try the rythmik audio subwoofer .. costs a bit but its a very musical (tight, fast) subwoofer. You can build their ported sub, if you want more output.