![]() If you have any questions on Unibox feel free to ask. However LROY deserves some serious consideration. It's not better than anything else in any category, but it does just about everything well. More than I wanted to pay, but it does what I want, which is pretty much what you want. Now, not to sway you in either direction, but sitting in my garage is a 15" Icon that will be going into my next install. A complete list of available services depends on your IPTV provider offer according to your subscription plan. watch TV channels, TV shows, and movies - listen to radio - add content that you like to favorites. I use this website for quick and easy conversions.Ĭonversions - online metrics conversion - US standard & metric system unit converter for measurements, and fractions to decimals With UniBox Player you can watch all free local Persian tv channels online. It's free and let's you graphically see predicted frequency responses, output in db, and excursion.Įverything is in metric, so you'll need to convert. ![]() Unibox - Unified Box Modeler Loudspeaker Design Software I'd HIGHLY suggest that you figure out how to use this bad boy of a program. But you'll sacrifice low end extension and output in the process. I haven't heard an LROY so I can't comment on it's sound quality against the XXLS, but I know the XXLS is a superbly sounding subwoofer. However, I think you can probably throw it out based on it being weaker than the other two in thump and low end. Then the XXLS has the decided advantage of price. 6 cube box should have much better low end than your chart is making it out at a almost unbelievable. The Icon will take the most power, and thus be louder, and in a. The CDT is almost laughable against the others, and the SDX10 just doesn't fit your space requirements. Ultimately, I think the two you can immediately throw out are the CDT and the SDX10. The Icon looks respectable pretty respectable, but is at least twice the price of the XXLS, and SDX10. The CDT is useless as a subwoofer by that chart. The XXLS would almost fit perfectly, but has a 3db down point of almost 20 hz higher than the SDX10. 60 cuft are the CDT, the Icon, and the XXLS. The only ones that have requirements under. The lowest for that one is the SDX10, but it has the highest enclosure requirements. That gives you a rough idea of enclosure frequency response. On your graph you have F3 values, which is where the frequency response of the subwoofer will have dropped by 3db. The things you want to be most concerned with are the enclosure size, and the 3db down point. You want big bottom end, good thump, and good sound quality. There is a 'larger' version of PSD-Lite that uses sharable databases for the drivers and PR T-S parameters, but it hasn't been officially released. You've essentially said that you want the best of all worlds when it comes to subwoofers. Jeff's model is more accurate than Unibox and the PSD-Lite implementation doesn't require Excel. How to interpret it is a whole 'nother animal. What you're looking for is what you have already. There is NO easy answer to your question.
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