@TLS Guy I'd seen HPFs mentioned many times for ported to control driver below tuning, but not for sealed subs particularly. Doesn't the box itself act as a hpf of sorts in a sealed sub? Or does that simply depend on the volume of the box and driver used?
The box obviously does control cone excursion, as the driver compresses and decompresses the air. However the boost required is a so great there remains and problem, as every 3db increase in equalization doubles the power to the driver. So if the F3 is forty Hz, then at 20 Hz the power is X 4. Now many movies now contain frequencies as low as 12 Hz. So that is X 8 power. That needs limiting.
Now actually other forms of loading actually provide greater back pressure to the cone than a sealed enclosure. I know that is counter intuitive,, but that is the physics of it.
At tuning a ported enclosure has such pressure that the cone virtually stops still and almost all of the sound is emitted from the port. No boost is needed and can not be applied. Sure below tuning the driver decouples from the box, and a high pass filter may be required. However this decoupling is gradual and progressive and more often than not a high pass filter is not required.
With pipes that I favor, the pressure in the region of the driver is enormous, and in a tapered pipe the frequencies are very broad. I have observed my drivers producing prodigious bass output and the cones seem to be barely moving. This is to be expected, as in a closed Gedeckt organ pipe, there is an antinode of pressure and a node of displacement. This is obvious as air can not move through a solid obstruction. On the other hand at the open end there is a node of pressure and an antinode of air displacement. So that is where the sound emanates from. No high pass filter is required. The most efficient way of loading a speaker is with a horn. Here the back pressure on the driver is enormous, and the air displacement at the mouth enormous. Again no high pass filter is required and only low powered amps are required to produce large sound pressure levels.
I well remember when Donald Chave of Lowther was sent for, when there was gig in St. Paul's cathedral London in the pre solid state era for a concert. The biggest outfits of the time could not do the job. He filled St. Paul's cathedral with four horn loaded 6" drivers and 40 watts of amp power. That was remarked upon in many articles following the concert. This should not surprise when you think of the ruckus one individual can create with a trumpet, trombone or French Horn.
So in pecking order the most efficient ways to load a speaker from most to least, is horn, pipe, ported(Helmholtz resonator) and a very distant last a closed box.. A closed box should only really be considered in a case where you absolutely don't have room for something bigger. It should be considered the loading of last resort.