Is there a reason to have separate chambers ? I can imagine there is some kind (?) of interference but don't have much reference for why one would or would not separate the drivers from one another.
Are there any audio related issues with using two drivers in the same chamber ? Do they negatively impact each other when they are both working ?
Edit: if you have two drivers in a single chamber could you separate them into two separate chambers and still be driving the same chamber volume per driver ?
If you have 2 drivers in a box where both drivers share the same volume of air you calculate the port using both woofers' parameters (Volume of displacement or Vd). If you divide the box volume in half, you not only would need 2 ports (one for each side), which changes the size of each port (smaller diameter ports can be used because each is only carrying half the load as before) but you are also using only one woofer to drive that port which changes the size again (half the driver Vd). Therefor the math is different, even though the end result needs to be the same.
The ports themselves don't care what size the box is (within reason anyway, the woofer will dictate box size way more than the port will). They are simply a tuned pipe that resonates at a frequency. The biggest challenge is getting a port that is big enough to not "whistle" when a lot of air is moving through it, yet is still small enough to actually fit inside the cabinet. A 1" diameter port can be tuned pretty low and be very short but it will not pass enough air to be useful. For subs you need large diameter ports and the larger the port diameter, the longer it needs to be for a given frequency.
So if I had a perfectly semetrical subwoofer with two 18" drivers and two ports and I sawed it in half and capped the ends to make two co pletely separate subwoofers, you are saying they would not work the same as if they were left as one because the port tuning would change. Is that right ?
So if I had a perfectly semetrical subwoofer with two 18" drivers and two ports and I sawed it in half and capped the ends to make two co pletely separate subwoofers, you are saying they would not work the same as if they were left as one because the port tuning would change. Is that right ?
I did read them, very good articles by the way. I'm not intending on cutting any boxes in halfI am putting the current subs under the microscope. These subs have two 18"s in a single chamber and a problem with port choking. The rectangle ports that run along the two longest sides of the cabinet have 8 handles taking up some amount of their volume. The ports are also not flared on either end and the dense foam that lines the back wall of the chamber seems to almost plug the port entrances.... those are some observations so far, I am working on what tests and measurements to make so I really have a full picture of how these boxes work.
How would I measure impedance at different voltages? with a VOM and a sine wave generator .. and patience? There's no way to do it with a WT3 is there ?
I did do an RTA where I turned up pink noise in 3dB intervals with infinite averaging for 30 seconds at a time. the first few captures looked the same, after a certain level (I didn't keep track of voltage) the out of band noise and distortion would increase by 6dB or more in some spots, after that it got to the point where the pass band information would not increase by the 3dB but again the slop would.
Are there any audio related issues with using two drivers in the same chamber ? Do they negatively impact each other when they are both working ?
Edit: if you have two drivers in a single chamber could you separate them into two separate chambers and still be driving the same chamber volume per driver ?
The individual cabinets also reduce intermodulation distortion slightly too, compared to two drivers sharing a single enclosure.Another advantage to each driver having its own seperate cabinet, is that with a "divider" the wood spans are now smaller. This makes for less vibration-ie a stiffer cabinet.
A solid divider that goes from side to side and front to back adds a lot of strength to the overall cabinet.