Thanks Ge0
I always appreciated his posts. Beyond the attributes you mentioned of being really smart and helpful - he had a way of being able to communicate pretty complicated topics in a way that were fairly easy for the average person to grasp. Too bad he doesn't post much anymore (that I'm aware of anyway...)
Apologies to the OP... I didn't mean to take this off track.
No worries. I've gotten the education I was looking for.
It’s only the same as buying a car for sq, bmw with kick panel locations or under seat woofers for example or the Europeans using pandas for db drag, at the end of the day there will always be cars with advantages, but also disadvantages... crx’s had the disadvantage of having a full dashboard also... something pandas and Marbella didn’t have, it’s just finding the sweet spot where they peak and making the most of it... crxs would’ve been better were the cabin the same width as they were high pandas and Marbella were pretty much cubes with the length twice the height... funnily enough my old van was the same, and it was horrible for balanced bass, you want the old 3:4:5 ratio to make a decent sq car so standing waves are all equally spaced as an example...
Here's a more specific way to determine your car/truck's starting frequency for cabin gain.
Measure the longest distance inside your car, in feet, call that "L", the frequency you're looking for is "F":
F = 565/L
As you've already learned, you can expect 12 db per octave as the frequency declines, up to a point. A leaky/flexible car will roll off at a higher frequency than a sealed car, a perfectly airtight and rigid car won't roll off at all, hence the crazy stuff you see in SPL vehicles.