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Opinion on Vented Enlcosure


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f1monkey 
Member - Posts: 16
Member spacespace
Joined: January 26, 2004
Location: United States
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 1:10 AM / IP Logged  
I'm about to build a vented enclosure with 2 infinity 1030w 10's. I've messed around with winISD for quite a few days now and I've come up with this in WinISD:
Tune the port\box to 35Hz(my choice)
2 - 3 X 8 inch diameter ports
It takes 3 cubic feet Internal volume plus the woofers area and the ports area
I get a mach of 0.05
I'm using 3/4" mdf, the speakers will be mounted in the front symmetrically with the 2 ports in between the speakers.
Does anyone see any problems with this? Maybe a suggestion? I also wanted to check on the port area that I need to add to the overall internal volume. Do I count it as a solid piece insice the box or just the thickness of the tube?
Sorry if I've forgot obvious info for my setup.
- Kyle
DYohn 
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Joined: April 22, 2003
Location: Arizona, United States
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 8:28 AM / IP Logged  
Is this calculation of 3 cuft PER woofer or for both in the same volume?  Count the volume of the port as if it was a solid mass.
f1monkey 
Member - Posts: 16
Member spacespace
Joined: January 26, 2004
Location: United States
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 9:59 AM / IP Logged  
it's for both woofers. no partitions inside and also with the same shared ports
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Platinum - Posts: 5,352
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Joined: November 01, 2003
Location: Alberta, Canada
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 1:31 PM / IP Logged  
Add some kind of center brace to the box, it can be drilled out to allow for air flow between the two chambers, the idea behind the brace is to keep the large surfaces from flexing and resonating.
Top Secret, I can tell you but then my wife will kill me.
DYohn 
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Joined: April 22, 2003
Location: Arizona, United States
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 1:45 PM / IP Logged  

Rob's suggestion is absolutely necessary, as far as I am concerned.  Also be sure to add internal braces along all walls.

f1monkey 
Member - Posts: 16
Member spacespace
Joined: January 26, 2004
Location: United States
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 4:07 PM / IP Logged  
I'll probably put in 2 braces on each side of the ports spread out evenly. now what about wall braces, would this be like running a 1" X 2" piece of wood around the middle of the box connnecting all of the sides?
- Kyle
jeffchilcott 
Platinum - Posts: 2,483
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Joined: April 11, 2002
Location: United States
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 5:08 PM / IP Logged  
Here is my 2 cents, i would build seperate chambers for each sub and possibly tune a shade higher to 38 hz, you shouldnt notice it drastically in your super lows but your mid low's and typical beats will be a bit higher you might get about 3-4db out of this, and independant vents per sub.
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f1monkey 
Member - Posts: 16
Member spacespace
Joined: January 26, 2004
Location: United States
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 5:31 PM / IP Logged  
Jeff,
I was kinda wondering about the tuning maybe was a little low. I noticed I get more output the higher I go.
Why do you reccomend seperate chambers over a single? Is there less chance of screwing something up?
- Kyle
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Platinum - Posts: 5,352
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Joined: November 01, 2003
Location: Alberta, Canada
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 5:35 PM / IP Logged  
So that if you have a sub failure you can still use the other, and the added strength of a center divider in the box to keep the box from flexing. Jeff is bang on with the rise of the tuning frequency as well, solid info.
Top Secret, I can tell you but then my wife will kill me.
f1monkey 
Member - Posts: 16
Member spacespace
Joined: January 26, 2004
Location: United States
Posted: February 18, 2004 at 5:46 PM / IP Logged  
So if I split the two subs into thier own chambers then....
...in winISD I should just design it for a single 10 tuned to 38Hz and then make that same box twice for the single dual enclosure? and also taking into account the divider will add .75" to the hieght of the box?
- Kyle
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