Sealed vs Ported Subwoofers


Can anyone explain the difference? I have a Totem Lightning and was wondering if I should sell it and by a sealed unit.

Unfortunately I can't test any because my house is being renovated.

Thanks

Jim
spender_1
Bob, You are correct, sealed woofers do roll off @ 12db per octave. My fingers are faster than my head. Everything else is accurate. I have built several woofers in my time. The best we did back in my old SpeakerCraft/Marcof days was a woofer facing up in a encloser that had 4 ports also facing up, it had an identical section with a woofer firing down. The four ports on both sections were joined by PVC, so the top & bottom chambers were ported into each other. There was about a one inch gap between them. We made these to look like an end table, they had the benefits of a ported system, kinda like a passive radiator, yet still rolled @ 12db per octave. I haven't seen this done anywhere else. Ed Martin designed this and it was very good indeed.
If a driver has enough LINEAR excursion, I still prefer a sealed system, but I have zero issue sitting down to a good ported design anyday.
IMHO, ported designs off better value, but ultimately sealed designs off better performance. I also question whether ported designs can ever be time and phase coherent.
In my opinion the central problem of low bass reproduction is room interaction. Low-frequency gain from boundary reinforcement has a significant impact on subwoofer in-room performance, so let's look at that.

But first a bit of background: The ear has relativly poor resolution in the time domain at low frequencies, but has good resolution in the frequency domain. What this means is, the in-room frequency response is the most significant factor. Subjective impressions of bass reproduction (slow, fast, tight, flabby, boomy, whatever) correlate well with the in-room frequency response.

Twelve dB per octave boost from room gain at low frequencies is theoretically possible in a perfectly rigid room, but in practice that never happens. Three or 4 dB per octave is more likely. But if we start out with a sub that is -3 dB at 25 Hz anechoic, by the time room gain is factored in, it may well be +3 to + 5 dB at 25 Hz, and thus will sound slow and sluggish (we are ignoring room modal effects here for the sake of simplicity).

A sealed box with at Qtc = .50 rolls off at 6 dB per octave, which comes pretty close to being the inverse of room gain. Therefore, subwoofers with low-Q sealed boxes often sound pretty darn good in-room, and are subjectively characterized as "tight" and "fast".

In order to generate a rolloff that even more closely approximates the inverse of typical room gain, i.e. about 3 dB per octave, we have to go to a specialized vented box. Now I realize this is counter-intuitive because vented boxes tend to be "boomy", but what we do is choose a woofer, box size, and tuning frequency that give us a 3 dB per octave rolloff from about 100 Hz on down. Such a system can be scaled to give very good in-room response to 20 Hz or below.

So I believe that both sealed and vented enclosures offer excellent opportunities for high quality in-room bass, provided the basic design takes the anticipated environment into account. Just for the record, there is much more to subwoofer design and room interaction than what I've described here.

Now if we are looking at subwoofers in general, and if we are merely speaking in generalities, sealed subs tend to give more natural-sounding in-room response. But that is because most vented subs are designed for loudest-deepest-possible-bass, because most subwoofer buyers buy based on specs. The types of subs I described above do not have impressive specs, as the -3 dB point may well be in the 50 to 60 Hz range... before room gain.

Duke
dealer/manufacturer (of both sealed and vented subs)
Duke, Nice accurate explanation. Still unless you have the ability to build your own subwoofer that you can factor your own in room response.... Normally if you built a Sealed sub with a finished Q of .5, most people would say that it had no low end output. It would be extremely tight and in the right room would be superb. Manufactures have no choice but to build subs as accurate as possible, then we are forced to deal with room interactions, which are all different from each other. Ideally a sub would come with some sort of built in rta, mic and eq circuit. We do see many subs with a low end boost, but as you alluded to, normally a filter network would be just as valuble if not more. Tim