I don't blame you for being skeptical. It's a bit hard to get one's head around at first, but if you think about if for a while it starts to makes sense.
Unfortunately I can't provide a model. I heard some years ago that Martin J. King (a well known math wizard / transmission-line speaker modeler) was working one but I don't know what became of that, or whether anyone has created a usable model. I'm betting one exists.
I also heard that the patent holder (Axel Ridtahler) has a model but he's not sharing it because he's marketing a sub licensed to Modal Akustik.
What is available are comparison measurements reported on several websites. Here's one:
https://www.lautsprechershop.de/hifi/aka_sub_sonder_en.htm
There are also comparison measurements presented in Ridtahler's patent here:
https://patents.google.com/patent/DE19830947C2/de
The patent is in German but I was able to copy/paste excerpts into Google Translate until I found the section reporting measurements of a woofer with an FS of 25Hz, resonating at 40Hz in a 150 liter sealed box, versus the same woofer resonating at 17.5Hz in Ridtahler's enclosure.
Absent a model, I'll give you my uneducated country boy take on it:
- On the backside, the woofers are not constrained by a trapped air volume as in a sealed box which would otherwise allow pressurization that would push their resonance upward. Rather, the rear chambers are fairly large and open on the back so very little pressure buildup could be expected.
- On the front side we have two opposing woofers in close proximity firing directly into each other (push/push), in a much smaller chamber that's open on one end.
I can easily imagine how under those conditions the impact each woofer has on the other, and that the air pressure and density within the front chamber must be above baseline atmospheric, and to the extent that it is, presents a resistance that would prevent the woofer from resonating as it would in free air, but would force its resonance downward, as reported in the patent, and as supported elsewhere by comparison measurements.
There consensus among the Ripol gurus one the DIY Audio Forum (Rudolf & Calvin, specifically) is that reducing area of the front chamber opening forces the resonance ever further downward until a point of diminishing returns is reached where the efficiency loss becomes unacceptable.
The general guidelines are that the area of the front chamber opening can be 1/3 to 1/4 the woofers' combined s/d (piston area).
For woofers with X-max >10mm, target 1/3 area
For woofers with X-max <10mm, target 1/4 area