> DO PORTS HAVE TO BE CIRCULAR?
Not in the least. There are subtle reasons to slightly favor round-ish, nothing that matters on the band stand. Altec A-7 port was 8" tall 27" wide rectangle. Don't go to a slit, although one insider trick is to space the frame off the board and let the "port" be the gap around the speaker.
Sliding ports, removable plugs, etc are all old tuner tricks. In a final product, you want to KISS, no loose movable parts to rattle, fall off, add weight. But in shop and for the first few gigs, leave something to change.
>> suggest an internal volume of app. 50 liters
> (57.6 L) thats not including the cleats LOL I got this thing screwed up alreadythen :)
No. Box volume is VERY un-critical. 10% changes are hard to discern in the result. 30% changes are plenty good enough, with maybe a half-inch adjustment to the hole. If you have 57L, use it, and FYL's port calculation for 50L will probably be "perfect" +/- your particular taste and need.
After skimming FYL's sim, I'm thinking that a 89Hz 41L driver, for guitar duty, in 50-56L, might ultimately work better sealed, and maybe like a smaller box. Sealed in 53L, resonance will be 119Hz, f3db around 95hz, Qt=0.62: a gentle shoulder with useful output at 82hz and a few semitones lower. Because of the low Xmax, the cone will slap with just a few watts electric power at the lowest gitar pitches. True, the vent significantly reduces excursion around 60-90hz.
Uhhh.... this sim is for a zero-impedance amplifier, right? Many gitar amps are high impedance. That means, roughly, that the zero-Z response curve is multiplied by the impedanace curve. That suggests a big peak at ~~130Hz, negating most of the effect of box tuning.
This speaker is really good for 180Hz on up. It has BIG midrange (no over 5%! BL > 14!!). While you can flatten it to 70Hz, to get that high efficiency, it has a short motor, and slaps at 5W 100Hz or 1W 50Hz. Its a helluva tenor. It's not a strong clean baritone. If you play with a bassist, that's good. But then you don't really want to "optimize" your bottom octave. That's the bassist's turf. I think what a guitarist wants is bottom-octave slap to colorize the tone and give an implied fundamental pitch splattered all up the mid-bass.
It would be killa on a 36" open baffle. Or on-floor, a 20"x36" baffle. Perhaps folded-back for 14"x24" front with 6"-8" sides. With a hi-Z amp, response to 82Hz is not bad, though still too easily over-driven by deep heavy bass. Be easy enuff to knock a hole in a 2'x4' handy-panel and try it at home, though an open baffle this large really needs a larger space to work into.