#21
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So I got the sub in the mail and I love it. It's quite power for how small it is (10" in a 1 cubic foot box). I played around with positions and what not and ended up putting it dead centre between the two speakers. Anywhere else sounded uneven. One thing I did notice is that when the phase switch is on 180° is sounds much more powerful in my listening chair. As stated above I don't have bass traps. I have a basic understanding of room modes and how they effect low frequencies within my room. Am I correct in understanding that a particular low frequency will hit the back wall and bounce back and cancel out the next frequency coming out of the speakers? So if that is more or less correct, is that why the sub sounds more powerful at 180°? Because the sub is kind of doing the opposite of what the bass drivers on my speakers are doing, therefore making it more difficult for my room to cancel out the low frequencies? I am pretty sure this isn't the textbook way I should be doing things, in that my sub should be in phase with my speakers/set to 0°. I'm thinking that when I do get bass traps that I will be able to use the 0° setting and still have powerful bass, no? Also, if I were to treat two corners (instead of all 4) at once, should I do the corners behind the speakers or behind my chair? The bass is most powerful behind my chair vs behind the speakers. Also, I noticed that when music is on and I am upstairs above the listening room, that the floor vibrates the most above where the rear listening room wall is, vs behind the speakers, although behind the speakers is an exterior wall and I'm guessing more inert, is that normal? One other thing, the subwoofer cabinet vibrates quite a bit. The build quality of the cabinet could be better. I was thinking of putting 20-30 pounds of something on top of the sub. The sub is spiked, but I find its not heavy enough to really anchor itself to the floor. I did end up pushing down on the sub to get the spikes to dig into the floor a bit more (don't care about the floor in this room). But I've always understood that the cabinet should be as intert as possible as to let the drivers act like pistons. So would weighing it down help or just be a useless tweak?
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#22
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I would agree, adding bass traps after getting the sub.
In building my current system (in a new room), I got it sounding just the way I wanted it to, then added my subs and all bets were off, it was a real struggle getting it to sound good in the new room, eventually having to install 10 bass traps, using a MiniDSP UMIK-1 calibration microphone and the REW (Room EQ Wizard) software to get the bass sounding right. Before that, the room had such awful "ringing", no matter what the bass player's notes were, the room had one note that it resonated at, that was about as loud as the music. At one point I was thinking of bagging the idea of subs, it was that bad. Now with the bass traps it sounds awesome!
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McIntosh C2500 pre amp, MC452 power amp, Autonomic MMS-5A server, PS Audio P15 power plant, DirectStream DAC, DirectStream CD transport, Focal Sopra No2 speakers, JL Audio F113V2 sub woofers (2), Sennheiser HD800 headphones, Dell laptop iTunes/Tidal/Roon, Wireworld cabling |
#23
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BWLover, You could do a "sub crawl" to help find the best placement for your sub. Buying a mic and downloading REW would help make you a sub expert and you can measure the response in various places.
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#24
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REW site.
An excellent suggestion. You can use REW's EQ wizard to model your room and it's quite intuitive. If nothing else, it is illuminating in respect to how room modes work and it's a lot of fun to play with. If that appeals, buy a mic and become expert in the issue in your spare time. I think room treatment is the bomb, and I like what subs do too. Subs are more fun than fabric, so I agree that you can start there and then tune the room, but I think room tuning is more important in the long run. Last edited by Pampero; 03-01-2017 at 07:18 PM. |
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