The RAM 1500 is one of the best-looking trucks on the road and one of the most popular platforms for audio upgrades. If you're looking for an under-seat subwoofer enclosure, you're working with a truck that has real under-seat depth — but also real constraints that generic boxes will fight against.
This guide covers what actually fits in a Crew Cab vs Quad Cab, the acoustic tradeoffs of sealed under-seat enclosures in the RAM's interior geometry, how competitors compare, and what configuration actually makes sense for your build.
Crew Cab vs Quad Cab: What Fits and What Doesn't
The RAM 1500 comes in two cab configurations that matter for under-seat audio:
- Crew Cab (4-door, full-size rear doors, 2002–2026) — Full rear cab with deep under-seat pocket. Supports all configurations: 8", 10", and 12" in both single and dual setups. If you want dual 10s or dual 12s, you need the Crew Cab. The rear seat folds up cleanly, giving you unobstructed access for installation.
- Quad Cab (4-door, smaller rear access doors, 2002–2026) — Smaller rear cab with shallower under-seat depth. Fits 8" and 10" (single and dual) and 12" single configurations. Dual 12" setups are out — the geometry simply won't close. The RAM Quad Cab's rear seat also folds up, but the under-seat pocket is notably shallower than the Crew Cab.
This matters more than most sellers acknowledge. "Fits RAM 1500" without specifying cab type is how you end up with a box that either can't close under the seat or sits at an angle. A vehicle-specific enclosure is built to your cab's measurements — not an average of both.
The RAM 1500 Advantage: Under-Seat Geometry
One thing the RAM 1500 has going for it acoustically: the rear seat sits high enough that the under-seat pocket has meaningful internal volume. This is partly by design — FCA/Stellantis engineers the 1500 with real under-seat storage in mind — and it benefits audio builds directly.
More internal volume in a sealed box means lower tuning frequency and better bass extension. In practice, a properly built sealed enclosure for the RAM 1500 Crew Cab punches harder at low frequencies than the same sub would in a smaller truck with a shallower under-seat pocket. The geometry works in your favor.
Sound Quality vs Bass Output: The Sealed Enclosure Tradeoff
Under-seat enclosures are sealed by design. The RAM's under-seat space doesn't allow for port tuning length at reasonable enclosure volumes. What sealed gets you:
- Tighter, more accurate bass — Sealed enclosures have superior transient response. Notes start and stop cleanly. Rock, country, and acoustic genres benefit most from this character.
- Better highway performance — Road noise in the RAM cab is moderate. Sealed enclosures maintain clarity at variable SPL levels better than ported designs, which can produce uneven response as you change volume at speed.
- Lower peak output than ported — A ported trunk box at the same wattage will be louder. If SPL competition or maximum bass impact is the goal and the rear seat is negotiable, a ported trunk setup will outperform a sealed under-seat box at any given wattage. But you lose the back seat.
For the majority of RAM 1500 owners — daily drivers who want bass without sacrificing rear passenger space — a sealed under-seat enclosure is the right call. The RAM's geometry makes it particularly well-suited to it.
Comparison: SubCab vs Major Alternatives
Here's how the main options compare for RAM 1500 buyers:
| Brand | Price Range | Lead Time | RAM 1500 Fitment | Customization | Construction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SubCab | $174–$314 | 10–21 days | Crew + Quad Cab specific | Color, size, single/dual | 3/4" MDF, built-to-order |
| Skar Audio | $120–$280 | 1–3 days | Generic "fits most trucks" | Size only | MDF, shelf stock |
| MTI Acoustics | $250–$450 | 3–5 weeks | Vehicle-specific | Limited options | MDF or fiberglass options |
| Super Crew Sound | $350–$600+ | 4–8 weeks | RAM-specific | High customization | Fiberglass, premium |
The breakdown: Skar Audio ships fast at a low price but sells generic enclosures — not profiled to RAM 1500 tolerances. MTI Acoustics and Super Crew Sound offer vehicle-specific fitment but at higher prices and longer lead times. SubCab sits in the middle: RAM-specific design, $174–$314 depending on config, 10–14 day turnaround on standard builds.
Build Your RAM 1500 SubCab
Pick your cab type, sub size, and color. Guaranteed fit. Ships in 10–14 days.
Configure My RAM 1500 →What Sub Size Should You Choose?
For the RAM 1500 specifically, here's the practical breakdown by sub size:
8" Subwoofer
Best for: accuracy-focused listening, tight bass, Quad Cab builds where clearance is tighter. An 8" in a properly built sealed enclosure delivers significantly cleaner bass than a cheap 12" in a generic box. If you prioritize rock, country, jazz, or acoustic genres, start with the 8". Smallest footprint also means maximum legroom is preserved.
10" Subwoofer
Best for: the sweet spot between output and accuracy. The most popular configuration for RAM 1500 daily drivers. More output than an 8" without the space requirements of a 12". Dual 10" in a Crew Cab gives you serious bass while keeping all rear seating functional. Works for any genre at any speed.
12" Subwoofer
Best for: maximum bass output. Single 12" works in both Crew Cab and Quad Cab. Dual 12" is Crew Cab only. If output is your priority and you have a Crew Cab, a dual 12" SubCab delivers serious low-end impact. The RAM Crew Cab's under-seat pocket has enough depth to make a dual 12" sealed enclosure perform well — you won't feel like you're fighting the geometry.
See the full RAM 1500 configuration guide for pricing and fitment on every cab type.
Why 3/4" MDF Matters
Every SubCab enclosure is built from 3/4" MDF (medium-density fiberboard). This isn't a cost-cutting choice — it's the right material for a sealed subwoofer enclosure. MDF is denser than particle board, dampens resonance better than plywood, and machines cleanly to tight tolerances. The RAM 1500 under-seat pocket has specific clearance requirements; a box cut to 3/4" MDF tolerances will fit where a sloppier construction won't.
Generic enclosures often use thinner walls to hit a price point, which compromises enclosure rigidity. Flex in the box walls destroys the acoustic seal and introduces resonance that muddies bass response. A properly built MDF enclosure doesn't flex — it converts every watt into air movement, not vibration.