I was playing with WinISD, and I'm not sure I understand why you'd shrink a box to control excursion.
For example, to get 99 dB at 20 Hz requires 470W with a smaller box and 300W with the ideal box. But in both cases, the cone excursion is the same.
Drivers have both thermal and excursion limits. The Infinity 1262W is rated at 300 Watts. More power than that can burn up the voice coils depending on duration. If you are designing around your driver's parameters, you ask yourself, "What size box keeps me within the thermal and excursion limits?" Since 300 Watts is your thermal limit, you enter that into WinISD. Then you shrink your box size until you are within the excursion limits of the lowest frequencies you want to play. This means staying within X-Max at that frequency.
By limiting excursion on the bottom end with a smaller box, you are actually losing efficiency everywhere. This is why a while back I asked you for a limiter function for the parametric EQ. It is better, IMO, to have the larger box for greater efficiency. If you look at my previous graph you see that limiting the maximum output below 30 Hz would help prevent exceeding X-Max. Pro Amps with DSP have the ability to set limiters, but I've never used these type of amps.
WinISD shows you the driver's impedence and the Amplifiers apparent load power. These can be helpful for setting the limits. I have a driver (actually 8 arrived a week ago) that can handle 500 watts, but reaches X-Max at 40 Hz with that much power. I would eventually like to use 500 watts per driver and be able to reach high SPL's above 40 Hz, but not exceed X-Max at frequencies below 40 Hz. The driver only needs 100 watts to reach X-Max at 20 Hz. I want to maintain a flat frequency response until I use more than 100 watts. I might have music that never has material below 40 Hz, so the limiter would not even be needed in those cases. Even with low frequency material, I might not not be playing at an SPL that requires the limiter. This means it would have to take into account peak signal levels and overall volume level. If I use only a 225 watt amp for all 8 drivers, I can stay within X-Max down below 5 Hz. However, I give up 12 dB of capability above 40 Hz (118 dB vs 130 dB
). I am hoping to eventually have 130 dB capability from all channels.
But you need more power because the box isn't as efficient when it's not the ideal size.
But you either don't have more power (amp limited) or your driver can't handle more power (driver limited) so you settle for less efficiency and greater extension or greater efficency and less extension.