I guess for the price is somewhat operative here.
However, from an engineering standpoint a sealed sub is an awful idea.
The reason being is that a loudspeaker cone is an absolutely atrocious coupler to air. That is why you have the pretty much useless response before Eq. The only advantage of a sealed design is domestic harmony, after that it ALL downhill.
Loudspeakers for good bass reproduction need an acoustic transformer. That mean a pipe, horn or Helmholtz resonator. Of which the former two are the most efficient, but the least conducive to domestic harmony.
The ported enclosure is a Helmholtz resonator. In the operative FR the cone of the driver almost stops still and the bass is efficiently produced via the port. Below F3 the driver quickly decouples from the box.
Specialized pipes, known as transmission lines can be designed that give broader, more efficient low Q support, which is my favored approach.
Horns are highly efficient, but complex and large.
You just have to consider musical instruments. Pipe organs, flutes and woodwinds like the oboes and clarinets can fill concert halls from the vibrations of small reeds or passage of air over a ledge. The most powerful instruments like horns, trumpets and trombones can blast you out of your seat just from the vibrations of human lips.
The bottom line is that the closed box loudspeaker, seemingly simple is from an acoustic point of view a very bad idea, and expensive to execute properly. It is highly wasteful of resources. It takes massive expensive motor systems and monstrous amounts of power to execute properly.
In your situation the 12" drivers are doing the majority of the lifting, and I have to say that the 10" drivers are contributing next to nothing to the table. For future reference using different drivers like you have is not a sound acoustic plan.