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Look around. Why don't you see many passive radiator subwoofers in cars? Because the forces of motion (braking, accelerating, going over bumps, etc) can cause the weighted passive diaphragm to have big excursions, which can even damage the active driver by causing the voice coil to jump the gap, etc. What happens when you push in on a PR in a single-PR speaker? The cone moves out. Also, when you go over bumps and cause the passive radiator to move from its center position, it may already be vibrating at large excursions and offsetting the center point of excursion by shifting the basket can cause huge stress on the surround. The spider can probably take it, but over time the surrounds may start to tear free from their adhesive. PRs in cars are generally not done for this reason. If they could be done, we would see a lot more of it, becuase PRs let you use a smaller box at a deeper tuning frequency. But the problems outweigh the advantages of a car passive radiator system.
"It sounds like it's barfing out the bass." - Zach
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