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Well as I said, my speakers clearly sound better imperfectly decoupled, even raised 5/8" above my firm, rigid floor, than flat or with spikes and pennies.I still think the forces generated by the woofers (pushing air away from the speakers) have to be either absorbed or reflected by the enclosure; if there is another option it is escaping me. Your comment about the rigidity, etc. of the enclosure, or the coupled enclosure/floor combination, implies (to me) that those forces are sufficiently dampened by the enclosure material & design plus the added mass effect of the coupled floor and the enclosure's insulation (thus absorbed but sufficiently dampened to have no further adverse effects). And I can also see where the passive radiators would have a positive effect here. It seems to me, though, that elasticity in the horizontal plane (from ball/cup decoupling) could provide better (and more elegant) dampening of those forces.
... This means they would need to have a resistive force equal or greater than the reactive forces produced by the driver.Resisting the reactive forces causes the the system then to be more accurate in its wave launch and it will produce less distortion...
This is a key point I think, but I also think you mean that the resistive force must be MUCH greater than the reactive forces, and that's where the difficulty arises.
I don't know for sure, but it's possible that the horizontal elasticity in the ball/cup could increase that resistive force.
I'm afraid only experimentation could prove or disprove that (because it depends on the degree of elasticity), and I wish someone would have already done it. The fact that there are some relatively new high-end speaker designs that utilize this system suggests that they have done that experimentation, but I certainly don't know that for sure.