Hi Captain,
Been looking up in the net and this is the best description I found so far in Wiki:
"In particular, "transmission line" is the name of a specific audio speaker enclosure topology, in which sound from the back of the bass speaker chassis passes along a long (generally convoluted) path within speaker enclosure. The energy is absorbed on this path, or emerges from the open end in phase with the sound radiated from the front of the driver, enhancing the output level at low frequencies.
A typical transmission line speaker layout.
This type of loudspeaker enclosure was proposed in October 1965 by Dr A.R. Bailey and A.H. Radford in Wireless World (p483-486) magazine. The article postulated that energy from the rear of a driver unit could be essentially absorbed, without damping the cone's motion or superimposing internal reflections and resonance, so Bailey and Radford reasoned that the rear wave could be channelled down a long pipe. If the acoustic energy was absorbed, it would not be available to excite resonances. A pipe of sufficient length could be tapered, and stuffed so that the enegy loss was almost complete, minimizing output from the open end. No broad consensus on the ideal taper (expanding, uniform cross-section, or contacting) has been established."
Given my very limited knowledge in hi-fi, I can only postulate that compared to sealed or ported subs, TL subs in theory should have no direct and/or residual resonance due to those culprits being absorbed by the transmission line. In the context of this thread, a sub that would be used for music should be crisp & clear, i.e., absolutely no resonance and any "after effects". And since the sub should be able to keep pace with the pace of the music, TL subs would fit perfectly given their ability to eliminate residual energy.
Now this is only my hypothesis. suri, venkatcr and other senior members can validate or invalidate this.
I would also be interested to hear from venkatcr about the comparison he is about to do with his Hsu sub! Can this be an item of interest for the next Chennai HFV meet?
hi thekinge -
the only type of subwoofer that really integrates with a high-end two-channel stereo system, IMO, a transmission-line -

By witchesofsound at 2009-07-24
the boy standing next to the transmission line sub-woofer is my 10 year old nephew (about five feet tall).
such subwoofers cost the earth to build - and i do not think they are available commercially - nobody would want such a massive monolith in the house - the subwoofer in the picture weighs in excess of 300 kilos (managed to weigh it recently in response to a query on another forum).
sealed subwoofers are too "tight" and sometimes "honky" (perhaps because the side-panels {6 of them} vibrate and produce undesirable harmonics) - and ported sub-woofers tend to be "single-note"
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