Posted June 17, 201114 yr This is for Justin Willmon at the *****.com forum. Four DC Sound Lab Level 4 15's will be going in here. Each sealed section is 3.6ft^3, and the ported section is 11.5ft^3 with a 47hz tuning. This is going in the bed of a single cab Dodge 1/2 ton truck.
June 17, 201114 yr Author My cpu restarted on me and I lost all of my open tabs and designs...thankfully everything was done and I got all the pics I needed.
June 17, 201114 yr how are you measuring cone area?Somewhat rudimentary you can just use the formula Pi(r^2). example: 10" subwoofer, radius is 5", 5^2 = 25", Pi(25) = ~78.53in^2Or you could look in the T/S specs and look for sd (effective cone area)
June 17, 201114 yr how are you measuring cone area?Somewhat rudimentary you can just use the formula Pi(r^2). example: 10" subwoofer, radius is 5", 5^2 = 25", Pi(25) = ~78.53in^2Or you could look in the T/S specs and look for sd (effective cone area) lol.
June 17, 201114 yr how are you measuring cone area?Somewhat rudimentary you can just use the formula Pi(r^2). example: 10" subwoofer, radius is 5", 5^2 = 25", Pi(25) = ~78.53in^2Or you could look in the T/S specs and look for sd (effective cone area) lol.I didn't see any way to interpret your question differently, but at the same time I was surprised if someone didn't know how to find the area of a circle.
June 17, 201114 yr lol. so rudimentary. let me rephrase my question for morons. did you use Pi x r squared or SD?
June 17, 201114 yr lol. so rudimentary. let me rephrase my question for morons. did you use Pi x r squared or SD?I used the sd listed on the DC website.
June 17, 201114 yr lol. he posted after you. thats the answer i was looking for. Not "Circles For Dummies"
June 17, 201114 yr lol. so rudimentary. let me rephrase my question for morons. did you use Pi x r squared or SD?I used the sd listed on the DC website. if im a noob then why did you mention pi r squared. lolimus maximus this guys a moron.
June 17, 201114 yr No need to slander other members. If you feel the need talk trash go somewhere else, willingly or not, your choice.Enclosure looks good Ryan, it should perform very well
June 18, 201114 yr how are you measuring cone area?Somewhat rudimentary you can just use the formula Pi(r^2). example: 10" subwoofer, radius is 5", 5^2 = 25", Pi(25) = ~78.53in^2Or you could look in the T/S specs and look for sd (effective cone area) lol.I didn't see any way to interpret your question differently, but at the same time I was surprised if someone didn't know how to find the area of a circle. Actually a little more than the area of a circle since it is a cone.This enclosure is going to be nuts
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