Jump to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

SSA® Car Audio Forum

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Featured Replies

Posted

I have designed a box using Torres.

 

Under port dimensions I have entered 33.5 as my length

 

In the calculator it has a Physical Port length of 25.

It also states that this will require me to make a bend but at 25 inches

In my mind I was looking at it that I will make the two peices of wood a total of 33.5" long.

 

1. What is the difference?

2. Which should I use to make my cuts with?

3. Am I looking at that incorrectly?

 

I am just confused now.

 

 

 

Lol me and a friend had this same conversation yesterday. From what I understand the "Physical Port Length" is the total length of the inner L and that is the length you want your port cuts to be.

The desired length that you enter under the inner port deminsions is the actual port length that you will get from using the "physical port length".

So in your case the port lengths you cut would have a total length of 25 yielding an inner port length of 33.5.

The way it was explained to me is the actual length of the port is measured down the center of the port and is an average between the physical L and the outer L created by the outer box walls.

Not sure if I confused you more but maybe someone else can explain it better lol.

Edited by A.SMALL

What is the inner port width?

  • Author

What is the inner port width?

 

7 inches

Okay, you are going to use the total port length of 33.5 inches and make the L 7 inches from the rear wall of the enclosure. You want the back port wall the same amount of space as your inner width (seven inches) from the rear wall of the enclosure.

been a long time since i read up on this but iirc port length is measured in the middle of the port width & not by the "L" bend

been a long time since i read up on this but iirc port length is measured in the middle of the port width & not by the "L" bend

How does this work? If it is seven inches in width back, why would you want the port wall 3.5 inches from the rear wall of the enclosure? To my understanding, half width is okay if you do not have any bends. The port would just go straight back.

say if a port is 4" wide u measure in the middle which is 2" to get your length & not along the L

say if a port is 4" wide u measure in the middle which is 2" to get your length & not along the L

Every enclosure I have built, I have the width of the port the same, before and after the L. I have never had any issues.

been a long time since i read up on this but iirc port length is measured in the middle of the port width & not by the "L" bend

How does this work? If it is seven inches in width back, why would you want the port wall 3.5 inches from the rear wall of the enclosure? To my understanding, half width is okay if you do not have any bends. The port would just go straight back.

He's not saying the inner port wall needs to be 3.5 inches away from the rear he's talking about measuring the "total port length" when you measure an L port you measure down the middle between the inner L and Outer L to get the total length. Here's a rough illustration that I found...

portlength.jpg

 

Edited by A.SMALL

 

been a long time since i read up on this but iirc port length is measured in the middle of the port width & not by the "L" bend

How does this work? If it is seven inches in width back, why would you want the port wall 3.5 inches from the rear wall of the enclosure? To my understanding, half width is okay if you do not have any bends. The port would just go straight back.

He's not saying the inner port wall needs to be 3.5 inches away from the rear he's talking about measuring the "total port length" when you measure an L port you measure down the middle between the inner L and Outer L to get the total length. Here's a rough illustration that I found...

portlength.jpg

I know what you are saying. Total misunderstanding on my part.

my bad if i didnt explain it too clearly & confused anybody but that diagram illustrates exactly what i was saying

  • Author

This is how I understand it. But when using the calculator I would only have to make my second port length 1 inch long. when I change its actual lenght using torres it still states being a bend. Even if I change my measurement to keep those values correct. I hope I am saying this clear.

Compare those results with another calculator and see what you get.

So are you asking how is it considered a bend if it's only 1 inch?

 

A screen shot would help us see what you're talking about .

  • Author

new_zpsf740dfcb.png

 

new2_zps008bbb33.png

 

Maybe this will help me

I think baffle displacement is what's throwing you off. To keep your width of 7" internal the first port piece needs to be 25.5" long. Torres is subtracting the triple baffle you're using from the physical port so that leaves you 25.5-2.25= 23.25 add another inch for the second piece and you get the 24.25 that its showing. If you meant to double baffle you should have just used .75 for your baffle thickness. I believe ..

Edit: the second piece wouldn't be an inch long it would be .25" long because the .75" thickness of the first piece has to be included in that total length = 1" and in this case I wouldn't either bother attaching a quarter inch piece of wood won't make much difference in tuning.

Edited by A.SMALL

So torres isn't including the extra baffles in the "physical pot length" ..

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.