There are many technical things happening behind a vented enclosure. What you really have is called a Helmholtz resonator, but that is not really important right now.
It is true that a PROPERLY constructed vented enclosure can be louder than a properly constructed sealed enclosure, but only in the band to which the enclosure is tuned. Your box/vent combination will resonate at one center frequency, with a 12dB rolloff to either side of that center frequency, ie, if your enclosure is tuned to 50Hz, at 25Hz and 100Hz, your output will be 12dB lower than the center frequency. This is the ENCLOSURE/VENT ONLY. The driver will continue to produce output at those frequencies, but at the lower frequency (25Hz), your driver will want to "unload", which means it will start to act as though it is running in free-air. This is why it is recommended that you apply a subsonic filter, to keep these lower frequencies from even being amplified...
This resonance (basically the port "noise") adds to the output of the woofer, again, with most efficiency, at the center frequency (50Hz, in this example), which adds 3dB to the output of the system, with corresponding loss of additional output to either side of the resonance frequency. The reason for the additional output is because this center frequency is 360 degrees out of phase from the original inout signal. 360 degrees is ONE WAVELENGTH out of phase from the original, but due to the VERY long wavelengths you are dealing with, the interference is constructive, meaning additive. As the frequency shifts above or below, this phase changes slightly, until it reaches +180 and -180 degrees, and as we all know ±180 degrees is a complete cancellation of output, right? There is why the output rolls off...
BTW, it is a complete fallicy that a 15 inch driver or a long throw driver will be louder. The maximum output of a driver is figured by multiplying Reference Efficiency (1 watt at 1 meter) by the maximum input power handling capability. 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 watts, etc, with a 3dB gain per input doubling. This is a STRONG oversimplification, there is more to it than this, but this is the general idea. If you have a 12 inch driver with an Re of 90dB, but a power handling of 512 watts, you will have a maximum out capability of 117db, but if you have a 15 inch driver with an Re of 87dB, and the SAME power handling of 512 watts, you will only end up with 114dB, a 3dB reduction in output.
Also, through very complex mechanical formulae, and for reasons well above my head, you will ALWAYS exchange output for extension. This means a long-throw driver that is capable of producing low frequencies, will have a very low Re, and therefore require TREMENDOUS excursion and power handling capabilies. A perfect example is the Eclipse Ti12. With a specifed Re of 87, this is a perfect example of a driver that you have to beat the s**t out of, in order to get good output from it.
I know Steven will have something to say about this statement, and I am willing to accept whatever criticism he is willing to hand out, but even the Adire stuff will NEVER have the efficiency of a JBL or PAudio professional driver. The Adire stuff is VERY capable, and has good efficiency for it's excursion capabilities, but if you look at a JBL 18, it has an Xmax of, like 1 or 2mm, but an efficency of 105dB. I do not see ANY long throw woofers (and by long throw, I mean 8-10mm or more) with an efficiency like that, and believe me, I've looked. An engineer friend of mine at Harman has tried to explain why this is, but as I said, it's over my head, and he's an ENGINEER!
Oh, and muffinman, vented enclosures are ALWAYS LARGER than a sealed enclosure, so there goes your theory, eh?
It all reminds me of something that Molière once said to Guy de Maupassant at a café in Vienna: "That's nice. You should write it down."