The MTX Inverted Apex Subwoofer Surround | MTX Audio

The MTX
Inverted Apex Surround

New MTX car subwoofers have been designed using our superior, high-performance Inverted Apex Surround (IAS) design. Found on the 35, 55, and 75 Series subwoofers, this technology delivers more cone surface area, up to 10% more Xmax, and eliminates a distortion problem that has been inherent in traditional surround designs for decades.

Apex vs. Traditional: A Side-by-Side Look

The surround is the material around the outer edge of the cone that connects it to the basket, allowing the cone to move up and down in proportion to the voice coil travel. Surround design plays a major role in sound quality and performance. Here's how the Inverted Apex compares to the traditional half-roll design used by most competitors:

Traditional half-roll surround animation
Traditional Half-Roll Surround
A single half-circle of material connects cone to basket. Takes up more of the cone's surface diameter and has an inherent wrinkling distortion on contraction.

How the Apex Surround Works

Working similarly to the way an accordion compresses, the Inverted Apex Surround is built to fold in at the edges when de-energized, then unfolds to extend up and down as the music starts and amplifier output is applied. Because the surround is much narrower than a traditional half-roll, the same 12-inch subwoofer gets nearly a half inch more cone surface area available to push air and make sound — a significant improvement in both quality and output.

MTX Apex Surround diagram and legend

More Xmax

The narrower surround doesn't just free up cone area. Due to its design, the Inverted Apex Surround also allows up to 10% more Xmax — one-way excursion — compared to a traditional half-roll design. More Xmax means the cone can travel further in each direction before distortion sets in, which directly translates to more volume displacement and more output.

10%
More Xmax over traditional half-roll surround designs — measured as one-way excursion

More SPL

Volume displacement — the amount of air a subwoofer moves per cycle — determines how loud it can play. The formula is straightforward:

Volume Displacement Formula Volume Displacement = Surface Diameter × Xmax

The Inverted Apex Surround increases both sides of that equation: more surface diameter from the narrower surround, and more Xmax from the design's structural advantages. The result is an MTX subwoofer that puts out more volume than competitor models using different technologies at the same diameter.

Subwoofer SPL and volume displacement calculation diagram

Eliminates Half-Roll Distortion

The half-roll surround design has an inherent wrinkling effect on contraction that creates distortion in the sound. Due to the structural shape of its arch and the stiffness of material needed to maintain that shape, a half-roll surround collapses somewhat when flexing during play — you can see it in the animation above.

The Apex offers more flex and less of a single-arched structure, eliminating this distortion. The result is cleaner, more accurate bass reproduction — notes stay crisp and true even at high output levels.

See It in Action

Which Series Use the Inverted Apex Surround?

The Inverted Apex Surround is featured across MTX's core car subwoofer lineup:

35 Series Car Subwoofers  ·  55 Series Car Subwoofers  ·  75 Series Car Subwoofers

MTX engineering Our engineering team developed superior surround material construction techniques to overcome the complex linearization process required for great sound. The result is the MTX Inverted Apex Surround — extremely accurate bass reproduction and outstanding SPL output.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a subwoofer surround and why does it matter?
The surround is the flexible material around the outer edge of the cone that connects it to the basket, allowing the cone to move up and down. Its design affects how much cone area is available to push air, how far the cone can travel (Xmax), and whether distortion is introduced as the cone moves. A better surround design directly translates to more output and cleaner sound.
What is Xmax and why does more Xmax matter?
Xmax is the maximum distance a subwoofer cone can travel in one direction while still behaving linearly. More Xmax means the sub can move more air per cycle before distortion sets in. Combined with cone surface area, Xmax determines volume displacement — the key measurement of how loud a subwoofer can play.
What is the difference between the Inverted Apex Surround and a half-roll surround?
A traditional half-roll surround uses a single arch of material that takes up more of the cone's outer diameter, reducing the available cone area. It also has an inherent wrinkling distortion on contraction. The Inverted Apex Surround uses four folds that tuck in tightly, freeing up more cone surface area and eliminating the wrinkling distortion — resulting in more output and cleaner bass.
Which MTX subwoofers have the Inverted Apex Surround?
The Inverted Apex Surround is featured on the MTX 35, 55, and 75 Series car subwoofers. These cover entry-level through high-output applications, so regardless of your budget or power level, there's an Apex Surround sub to match your system.
Does the surround type affect subwoofer power handling?
Not directly. Power handling is primarily determined by the voice coil and motor assembly. However the surround design affects how efficiently a subwoofer converts that power into output. More cone area and more Xmax mean the same power goes further — so an Inverted Apex Surround sub will produce more SPL from the same wattage compared to a comparable half-roll design.
35 Series Subwoofers
35 Series Subwoofers
Entry-level · Inverted Apex
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55 Series Subwoofers
55 Series Subwoofers
Mid-range · DVC · Inverted Apex
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75 Series Subwoofers
75 Series Subwoofers
High-output · Inverted Apex
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Sub + Amp + Box Packages
Sub + Amp + Box Packages
Pre-matched · Ready to install
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