Enclosure for (2) Dayton Audio ND91-4 and (1) Peerless 830878 3-1/2" Passive Radiator

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Enclosure for (2) Dayton Audio ND91-4 and (1) Peerless 830878 3-1/2" Passive Radiator

I am thinking about building a single speaker that uses two Dayton Audio ND91-4 Drivers and one Peerless 830878 3-1/2" Passive Radiator.

Ive read that people have had success with using a single ND91 in a vented 0.04 cu. ft. enclosure.
So, would it work out well if I made a 0.08 cu. ft. enclosure with two ND91s and one 830878 radiator?

Never used a passive radiator before, so just curious how that effects the enclosure requirements.

OR,,,
am I better off just doing a 0.08 cu. ft. enclosure with a typical tube port?
If so, can anyone provide me with what size/length I would need? Prefer to use easy to get PVC pipe.
Or I could do a slot port actually. Front facing.

Links to the driver and radiator...
Dayton Audio ND91-4
Peerless by Tymphany 830878 3-1/2" Passive Radiator
 
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Thanks guys, just looked into the Dayton radiators, and they do indeed seem to be a much better fit.
The ND90-PR is perfectly matched to one ND91 driver.
But yea, looks like I would definitely need two radiators with two drivers.
Or, I could use a single ND140-PR 5 1/4" which would be over twice the volume of the two drivers, which might fit my design better.
 
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Typically you want the PR to have about twice the Sd of the main driver. It needs to be modeled to get the best performance and many PR's have a bolt that lets you attach washers for added mass. Also, you can use any driver with voice coil, if it has the right TS params to be a PR. Then the voicecoil can be left open or a resistor can be connected to form an electromagnetic damper (brake) for tighter but less deep bass. Useful for cheap/budget drivers to turn into PR's which can sometimes be hard to find.
 
Did you mean Vd? Not Sd?
I ask because it says this on the Dayton PR specs...
Tip: As a general rule, the passive radiator(s) should have at least double the displacement of air (Vd) as the active woofer(s)/subwoofer(s) in the system.
To calculate Vd: Sd x Xmax = Vd

Does it hurt to be over twice the Vd?
Two ND-91s would be 279.68 Vd (559.36 for double)
A single ND140-PR is 779.4

The ND91 specs say 0.01 cu. ft. for sealed and 0.04 cu. ft. for vented.
If I use a passive radiator, I should use the vented volume, correct?
 
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