Does Speaker Grill Cloth affect port behaviour?

I have a ported sub which lives outside. The rear-facing port would seem to be an open invitation for mice, wasps, or small birds to set up home inside the cabinet. I plan to cover the inside aperture of the vent with speaker grill cloth but it stands to reason this will have some affect on airflow.

Thoughts?
 
If you manage to keep the cloth with some distance to the port opening (maybe 5-10 cm/2-4") the air speed and movement is very much reduced.
The question is - will animals still enter the port?
Maybe a metal grille at the outside end of the port? Still with some distance to minimize air movement/air speed.

Edit: if there is a big flare at the inside end of the port the airspeed and movement will be small and covering this end of the port will have less influence, except for lowering the tuning.
You could just try it out ...
 
I mean similar to this.
 

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I plan to cover the inside aperture of the vent with speaker grill cloth but it stands to reason this will have some affect on airflow.
Ports are not supposed to flow air, the slug of air in the port should wiggle back and forth.
Most speaker ports are covered with grill cloth.
Grill cloth won't have any more affect on port tuning or output on the inside of the port than outside.
This will definitely lower the tuning frequency.
That material looks quite breathable, based on what I've measured, it won't lower the tuning frequency at all.

Art
 
it won't lower the tuning frequency at all.
It will move with the air and thus add weight to it.
But I guess the difference will not cause much damage.

During my port investigations I realized how much the air in the port is moving, once you turn up the volume. Generally, ports of commercial speakers tend to be rather small. So air movement and any disturbance will affect its function.
Have a look at the port noise spectrum if you only glue some sand on the port wall surface: https://www.diyaudio.com/community/...rbers-and-port-geometries.388264/post-7518740
 
I've just realised, I wouldn't bother buying a metal sieve; when I started making speakers, I use car speakers that came with metal grills with a plastic surround, I still have a pile of unused black grills, so I'd just use one of them, you can buy the grills separately quite cheaply.
 
I'll add that the Q of the resonator will be lower with the cloth.
I'll bet the Q, Fb and frequency response changes if acoustically transparent grill cloth is used will be difficult to see in a measurement, much less hear. I'd also bet the changes will be less than flipping a cabinet with it's port near the floor upside down.
To confirm my assuptions I'll measure it and report back.
Looking forward to the measurements, I never bothered to save mine.
 
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