again, stuffing in itself does not dictate speed.
A lightly stuffed box is what a woofer is normally spec'd at, as you add stuffing, a medium stuffed box, does give the woofer the illusion of a larger box by slowing down the flow of air inside the box, the air has to filter through the stuffing. When you over stuff the box, air flow cannot pass through and has the opposite effect. Air can't pass through at all and the woofer reacts as though it is in a smaller box.....Maybe we have a simple question in terms about the amount of stuffing (what is lightly stuffed or heavily stuffed) As I stated earlier, all things being equal, I prefer a sealed box sub myself. Sorry, but this is not opinion. It works this way.
In a sealed box woofer, I have many time added mass to raise qts so that a woofer would go down better in sealed box. The key there is "does the driver have enough motor & suspension to support the mass" I hope this helps, Tim
A lightly stuffed box is what a woofer is normally spec'd at, as you add stuffing, a medium stuffed box, does give the woofer the illusion of a larger box by slowing down the flow of air inside the box, the air has to filter through the stuffing. When you over stuff the box, air flow cannot pass through and has the opposite effect. Air can't pass through at all and the woofer reacts as though it is in a smaller box.....Maybe we have a simple question in terms about the amount of stuffing (what is lightly stuffed or heavily stuffed) As I stated earlier, all things being equal, I prefer a sealed box sub myself. Sorry, but this is not opinion. It works this way.
In a sealed box woofer, I have many time added mass to raise qts so that a woofer would go down better in sealed box. The key there is "does the driver have enough motor & suspension to support the mass" I hope this helps, Tim