Hi.
(1) my main Speakers are KEF Q-70's. The Q-70's definitely need the subwoofer help on the low end. Mid and High's on the KEF are fine.
(2) I'm thinking about purchasing a new subwoofer. I'd like to spend between $800 and $1200.
(3)I won't be using line level to drive the sub. I'm running a straight 2.1 system and I'll use Speaker level lines to feed the subwoofer.
Frist off, I am not recomending any active sub for you as you had owned one of the best in the sub market.
(1) Yes, any loudspeakers NEED an active sub to handle subsonic music properly, e.g. bass pedal notes
of pipe organs.
I am using a pair of KEF 2-way bookshelvers (with a 9.5" x13" woofer). I did not know I missed so much
bass music for so long until I've added on my 100W 10" sub to my system. What a shame!
(2) You may call me cheap again. To pay one grand plus for a sub is some big buck for me as mine is not such an exotic brandname like Velodyne but still a well-known US brandname which cost me much much much less. Exotic brandname is always a strong temptation provided one can afford it. But if done properly, a cheapie sub can still deliver excellent sub-sonic performance like mine.
(3) This is always a dilemma for stereo amps owners to use active sub.
Since no stereo preamp or intergrated amp get any dedicated sub O/P feed, the only way available for
layman endusers is to use the loudspeaker I/P of the sub.
But then the volume of the sub changes with the volume of the mainstream amp. No good.
Besides, the hum, noise, distortion etc from the amp will be some added 'bonus' feeding the sub as well.
Another NO GOOG!
Unless one has to drop a bundle to buy a sub electronic x-over unit. What else can be more helpful?
One can tap the music signal from the preamp O/P to feed the line I/P of the sub. But then, something else happens, affecting the sound of the mainstream signals. It is that the capacitance loading of the sub woofer interconnects & the low I/P impedance Z of the sub's built-in SS power amp.
They both draw down the music signal level & sonic quality passing thru the amp. This happens to my
tube phonostage & passive linestage & I don't accept it.
So instead of spending some big bucks to buy a costly subwoof low-cut x-over like other helpless audio
fans, as a die-hard cheapie DIYer, I am design/building one simple impedance buffer to match my sub.
Technically, who needs to pay some bigbucks for a external active LF X-over unit as the sub already provide low- cut frequency adjustment?
If this works out, I will be a happy camper.
c-J