Small speaker with bass and high sensitivity

Speaking of loudspeaker, I understood their was a trade-off between : compactness of the enclosure, low cutoff frequency, and sensitivity. You can have two of those, but not three.

So I wonder, how can Klipsch makes something like that : https://www.klipsch.com/products/rp-400m-bookshelf-speaker
exterior (!) volume : 8.2Liters
low cut-off (3db) 52Hz
sensitivity : 93db @ 2.83V

I see no speaker on the shelf which can do a similar thing. (low VAS, low FS, high sensitivity)
How are they doing ?
My best hypothesis so far is that they dont, maybe the 93db is a maximum very far from 50hz (and the sensitivity is closer to 89db or something), maybe there's a bump at 55hz (and a hole deeper than -3db between 70hz~120hz).
But, are they doing it ? Can I do it too ?
 
The efficiency is not so much the box, it is the driver. Until you get close to Fs, the box is irrelevant. Not how you couple to the air can make a big difference. That is why HORNS are use for PA as the focus the energy in one direction so the local SPL is higher. The driver still can only push as much air as it can. With funky alignments, you can get resonances that give a boost in the F3 area, but that is not the same as efficiency.

And they lie. The did give a sensitivity @ 1W, but where? 1mm ? Standard is 1M, 1W.
 
one way to get most of that = 6th order assisted reflex using driver qts ~0.312 and 6dB Q=2 boost at fb.
But only in the pass band. The resonance I spoke of. Unfortunately, it usually requires totally unrealistic port dimensions. I tried several candidates subs and kept getting 20 and 30 foot ports. Caution as you still need to manage X-Max.

The efficiency, is the result of the driver above the loading. Enhanced only by how it may be coupled. For instance, flush mount in a wall so you are radiating into half space.
 
My personal experience with a 2W tube amplifier is that those small Klipsch does not sound any louder than similarly sized and priced bookshelf speakers that are specified at lower sensitivity. They are good speakers for the price anyway.
 
I've used 6th order ported a number of times in PA, domestic and my bass guitar rig. No unrealistic port dimensions reqd. My first was in the early part of the millennium and the late djk put me onto it.
Better luck than I. I kept needing 5 or 6 inch ports to keep velocity down for just a twin 10 setup. How did you get a broad enough BP for a Bass guitar? Fundamentals from 40 to 400, but overtones clear up over 5K. Seems you need a direct radiator unless you built a 2-way. A couple nice 8 mids?

An big PA sub makes a lot of sense. Does not have to go terribly deep and can be physical larger. For a PA, efficiency is king. A big 40 to 80 resonant ump is not too hard to pull off and it is actually not far from what is needed.
 
Better luck than I. I kept needing 5 or 6 inch ports to keep velocity down for just a twin 10 setup. How did you get a broad enough BP for a Bass guitar? Fundamentals from 40 to 400, but overtones clear up over 5K. Seems you need a direct radiator unless you built a 2-way. A couple nice 8 mids?
6th order ported not 6th order bandpass. Different things. Some dude named Keele thought it up.
I use 15 for LF and above that I use a pair of B&C 6s and a Selenium D220 on a Celestion 9040. I play ERBs mainly the Ibanez SRMS806.

An big PA sub makes a lot of sense. Does not have to go terribly deep and can be physical larger. For a PA, efficiency is king. A big 40 to 80 resonant ump is not too hard to pull off and it is actually not far from what is needed.
LF enclosures in the PA were PPSL 18s and above that a variety of horn and direct radiator mids and HF depending on what the job required.