That has not been my experience. I think it is likely that a musically "tight" ported sub can be made, but I have yet to see one that rivals the quickness of the better sealed subs.
Here is an impulse response spectrogram for the sealed Rythmik E15HP:
Refer to the color scale immediately right of the graph.
Look at how tight the red (90dB) clings to the 0ms axis.
Here is the PSA XS15se (pretty darn close to the Rythmik and my ears don't hear the difference!):
Here is the ported (technically passive radiator, but close enough) Salk/Rythmik subwoofer. Fortunately Jim did not combine the two signals from the driver and the port (he was new to the measurement software at the time) so we can see more of what is happening.
For the driver, we see not too different from the behavior of the sealed Rythmik E15HP (which probably has the same driver) above except for some nastiness at around 25Hz:
And when we look at the port, it is apparent that the nastiness comes from port resonance effecting the driver:
Let's look at Rythmik's ported LV12r. Again, the driver and the port are separate charts.
Here is the driver. Not quite as tight as the E15HP. I would assume this is more driver than port as I don't believe the servo system is really depending on acoustic suspension from the cabinet. And again, there is some bloom in the 20-25Hz region:
...and again, we see it comes from the port:
So, both the sealed subs above (which are the best I have heard) are "out of the orange" (i.e. 15dB down from the pulse level) in under 10 milliseconds, it takes the ported Salk/Rythmik >100ms to do the same and the ported Rythmik ~70ms!
Enough picking on Rythmik's ported subs.
Here is the SVS SB1000 followed by the PB1000:
Here we see the SB1000 is "out of the orange" at about 20ms and the ported takes about twice as long.
However, it is not natural for a sealed sub to have such a response. It is obviously a compromise SVS made to appeal to the "Wow, listen to my sub!" crowd. They are fighting physics to get as much deep end as they can out of that 12" driver in a 14" cube! That is a marketing decision and apparently a good one because SVS is probably doing as good as, or better than any of the ID companies. Understandably, the idea of buying a sub that disappears and doesn't call attention to itself is not the first thought people have when spending $500 to $1000 on a sub; they want to be impressed and want to impress others with strong deep bass. I can sympathize - I run my subs 6 to 8dB hotter for HT adventure movies because it is fun feeling the impacts! However, I cannot do this for music without ruining the experience, YMMV.
Since I'm throwing up charts here is the JLAudio E112. It shares a lot with the SB1000!
And here is the SUB 1200 I recommend as an inexpensive "get acquainted" option (split driver & port charts):
So, we see that the SUB 1200 is faster than the PB1000, the Salk/Rythmik, The LV12r; and not too far behind the SB1000 and E112.
Impulse response is not the only measurement of concern, but it seems to be the one that I butt heads with most among the forum recommended subs!