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And why I think that a 300-pound array of six large drivers in one cabinet is going the wrong way
Could someone post a link to a picture of a "W frame dipole sub" for those of us who have no idea what this is??
Quote from: Duke on 2 Nov 2007, 12:02 amSome dipole owners try stereo subwoofers, and these people are more likely to keep the subwoofers in their system - not because they get twice as much bass, but because the blend is much better. There's a reason for it.Multiple subs will suppress room modes. The easiest example is one sub located against a wall. This sub will excite half-wavelength resonances that bounce back and forth against the opposite wall. Setting up a second sub on the opposite wall will tend to cancel out this half-wavelength mode. However, this model assumes that the same bass signal is coming out of both subs. If the recording engineer has close-miked the bass instrument, and the mixing engineer puts all the bass on one channel, then the advantage of the multiple subs disappears. This was done on some great jazz LPs from the '60s.This is a good reason to mix the left and right channels of the low bass, even with a set-up that uses multiple subs. It is a why I am interested in finding small subs with 8-inch drivers. And why I think that a 300-pound array of six large drivers in one cabinet is going the wrong way, unless, of course, you can afford two of them and have no trouble moving them around the room to find the best set-up. Just my thoughts on the matter,Mike
Some dipole owners try stereo subwoofers, and these people are more likely to keep the subwoofers in their system - not because they get twice as much bass, but because the blend is much better. There's a reason for it.