Hey everyone, since a lot of audiophiles here have backgrounds in physics and engineering, I wanted to share a cool concept. In high-end dynamic drivers, we constantly manage micro-fluid dynamics and pressure damping to prevent distortion. Lately, I've been looking at how these identical laws of fluid momentum are handled on a macro scale to control heavy physical forces. For example, checking out the pressure-vessel mechanics on this engineering site shows how modern ram pumps harness severe water hammer shocks—the exact pressure spikes we dampen in acoustic chambers—to lift water completely power-free: https://meribah-ram-pump.com/. It's a neat look at using natural kinetic velocity instead of external electronics to balance a system. Does anyone else find that studying macro fluid systems gives a fresh perspective on how air pressure and resonance behave inside tight IEM enclosures?