Yes that's what was tripping me up. The original article didn't delve into this too much. More on this: I've read elsewhere that the amount of room gain one gets and what frequencies get this boost depends on the length of the longest wall. If true did this get used in the size calculations, where a 3,000 cubic foot room with 8ft ceilings would be presumed to have 19ft walls? Anything you can share about how room volume or wall dimensions translate into room gain on top of the measured groundplane output would be very helpful.
Also I'm curious about this criteria: "The sub must not exceed the following deviation limitation criteria to earn a room size recommendation: Reference Level (dB) from 31.5Hz to 63 Hz with no greater than -6 dB @ 25 Hz." What happens if the 25Hz measurement IS more than 6dB off than the average of the 31.5, 40, 50, and 63Hz measurements? Looking at the recent review of the Arendal 1723 1S, it looks like this does indeed happen. The 31.5-63Hz average is 111.3dB and the 25Hz output is 10.2dB lower @ 101.1dB. Does a 4.2dB "penalty" get applied to the +6dB "CEA to 4m 1/8 Freespace" conversion? It says the 1S missed the Large room rating (115dB) by 1dB, and applying that penalty gets me to 113.025dB for the 31.5-63Hz average. This stuff interests me!
Finally, on a previous forum post in 2021 you hinted at an article in the works about subwoofer room pressurization, or rather how you think the term should be "put to bed". Did that article ever get finished?