wow... I reaaally did it... Y'all asked for it!!!
Here's a link to a semi-recent thread here on the12volt... Some other good links to other threads and web-pages within it as well. (please excuse the rantings, tho...)
(Answers from here on out, appear as the questions did...

)
sedate
1: I'm glad you approve; and practice, practice practice...
2: Yes, rate of change could be seen as simple frequency response, as a woofer DOES have to move faster for higher frequencies, but doesn't it have to move faster for low frequencies as well - because of the throw? As Steven states in his answer to this, it has more to do with the "transient response" of the woofer. (I still hate using that phrase - it, IMO, relates to something completely different) How fast can the motor structure make that woofer cone CHANGE DIRECTION from in to out?
This rate of change is the AMPLITUDE of an audio signal in air.
When a woofer is moving a great distance, and the amplifier says "Move back in" by changing the electrical signal it is feeding to the voice coil(s), this change is supposed to happen as quickly as possible, right? The BIGGER the electrical signal the amp feeds the woofer, the faster it will want to move the other way, right? Well, the bigger the electrical signal the amp feeds the woofer, the faster it "turns around", the louder the woofer's output, right? And, the longer stroke observed... There you go...
Yes, generally speaking, a smaller speaker (like a mid or tweeter) will have an EXTREMELY LARGE (strong) MAGNETIC FIELD, relative to the size of the diaphragm it is expecting to move, and/or a relatively large electrical signal from the amp. This is why a smaller driver will generally have more output for a given electrical input.
I have noticed that longer throw woofers
do seem to have better sound quality at extreme outputs, and this probably relates to the linearity curve... At longer excursions, a short-throw, high(er) efficiency woofer will (or should) sound not quite as good - because they begin to work in a far less linear range. Yes, I think your assumption is safe, BUT, the determination of ultimate output is determined by how much power is fed to said woofer, not it's excursion capabilities.
Steven
I was assuming EQUIVALENT ALIGNMENTS. All drivers in a sealed, and say Qtc of .707 enclosure. The enclosure size and alignment DOES ABSOLUTELY affect the output, but my statement should have put all of the drivers on a level playing field, even if it does not
say it.
The Parthenon also uses so much neo magnet in it's motor, that the steel in the motor structure is this close (dave holds his hand up with forefinger and thumb with a vanishingly small gap between) to being saturated. This gives it a HUGE magnetic field to work with. Again, back to the strong magnetic field, and the mandatory control it will have over the diaphragm for a given inout signal. While it is ABSOLUTELY IMPOSSIBLE to saturate the air in the gap, you can eventually saturate the metal structure UP TO THE GAP... This, and your Parthenon has FOUR SQUARE FEET OF DIAPHRAGM... Quite the advantage there, eh? How about if the Parthenon only had 75 square inches of radiating area? Oh sure, the surround would have to be 6 inches across, but I bet with a motor structure like it has, the output would be even BETTER than the big one.
No. Inefficiency is NOT a
symptom of excursion, but it is completely a by-product of excursion. The trade-offs are manifest!
Another thing I just thought of: Longer excursion almost necessarily maens more stress on a diaphragm, this mandates heavier, stiffer cones to minimize distortions... (exotic materials not completely included, but not completely excluded either - this IS a GROSS generalization) I was looking at an Eminence guitar woofer, and it has an Sd of 95 inches square, a Vd of a MERE 125cc, a MMS of 33g, but an efficiency of 96dB! (this is a guestimate, as the efficiency guide for these drivers actually specifies X efficiency at Y frequency - the sign of a GOOD loudspeaker manufacturer. These actually spec as high as 101.8dB at 3K! (Alpha-12)) Check
here for the way Eminence specs their drivers.
Poormanq45
Yes the CV and JBL drivers DO have a larger Sd, but not enough to equal the kind of efficiency gains one sees between them and an Eclipse or Adire. My SW9122, for example, spec'd on the Klippel Machine at the Harman Labs, acheived an ABYSMAL 84dB! The old-school (1st gen) 10 inch Ti?,
78dB!!! No WONDER I have to beat it with 2700 watts! To HAVE TO HAVE three+ HORSEPOWER to drive a woofer is a sad state! (One horsepower, BTW, is 746 watts, so really I have almost FOUR horsepower!!!)
This goes to answer your final question/statement, too, sedate. Yes, the increase in cone area SHOULD give more output, but I still maintain that all of the above statements have FAR more to do with it than the small (25%) increase in cone area. A 100% increase in cone area nets (again - oversimplified dramatically, for the purposes of discussion) a 3dB increase, whereas these drivers are upwards of 6 to 8 dB more efficient - a 400%increase in output...
Damn... my fingers are tired, and so is my brain... sleepy-time...
It all reminds me of something that Molière once said to Guy de Maupassant at a café in Vienna: "That's nice. You should write it down."