You must have watched a different video then me. Or my comprehension is poor. I should have sat in front of the class room instead of the back
I am really surprised at your choice of a video to make your point. I had a few minutes today to rewatch it before my wife got up and I made notes about the the following:
At 53 seconds Ed talks about sealed having good detail, articulation, tightness and transient response.
At 1:06 he puts up the slide about transient response.
At 1:20 Nick talks about a sub with poor transient response might blur some of the notes.
At 1:28 Ed slays a properly designed sealed subwoofer can sort of stop on a dime.
At 1:49 Ed says a sealed subwoofer can provide you with a no compromise listening experience even on home theater provided the room size and volume level are consistent with then output capabilities of the subwoofer
At 2:26 Ed talks about the performance of ported in the 20-40 hertz range make them a good choice for action and sci-fi movies in a larger room at higher playback levels
Nick concludes there is a grain of truth to sealed being better for music and Ed states a sealed subwoofer can provide you with a no compromise music and home theater experience if the volume levels and room size are consistent with the output of the subwoofer.
Given that I am looking at using this in a 2nd/3rd bedroom which will be the enclosed and maybe 1200 cubic feet in volume and that I am looking for better music performance and I don’t have an unlimited budget, it really seems I should be at least considering a sealed sub.(Sorry about the run on sentence- I have to get going).
Which one I will get is an issue I am still researching. I might actually end up getting both and trying them both out and sending one back.