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I can see the rational of not measuring. It wil involve at least a $400 dollar investment plus the learning curve.
Scotty, don't know if you'll see this since the thread is in quarantine, but bass response can be measured easily and cheaply with a Radio Shack meter and a test disk. They aren't good enough to do the highs, though.I'd say the price of admission to full-range measurements is about $150. That would include a calibrated Behringer ($80), a cheap boom stand, cheap mic preamp, and the free Room EQ wizard. This assumes you have a PC and a suitable sound card -- add a bit more for a USB sound card if not (which would generally include the phantom power and mic pre). There are useful guidelines and recommendations on the REW web pages.I do think, though, that for most people, the bass response is the most important. As so often in these debates, I think both parties are right, just arguing at cross purposes. You can tune your room and match subs and evaluate bass extension by ear, but it's faster to do it with measurements and they can yield a plethora of useful information, such as which room dimension is causing a response anomaly.
This means that they were setup wrong then. Typical and simple as that.
every system will "sound better" with properly set up subwoofer(s).
This is fact!
Gonna have to respectfully disagree here Jason. Though there aren't many speakers for which this is the case, and certainly many problems related to integrating subs can be solved thru he proper choice and setup of subwoofers. And of course the room will also have an impact.
Just to be clear here. You're disagreeing that every system will sound better with properly setup subwoofers rather than not properly setup ones? Interesting.
No, that some systems will not benefit from the addition of subwoofers, no matter how well set up.
I am thinking of high end full range speakers with very precisely matched drivers that already go down to 20Hz. As long as there are no nasty nodes at the listening position(s), these may sound better than an attempt to integrate subs due to driver matching issues and/or crossover related integration difficulties. It may also be possible and preferable to incorporate DSP with full range speakers to achieve excellent results. Not that multiple subs and well-integrated subs can't do wonders for the majority of systems perhaps. But I tend to always be wary of sweeping generalizations. My 2¢. And I will leave it at that.
This is the type of attitude that derailed this thread to begin with. You're making a claim as a universal truth, and you don't have the qualifications to do so. As a moderator, you should be ashamed of yourself.
Uh, no, this is fact. It's been proven for many many years. Do your homework on acoustic measurements before you insult people.
since you made the blanket statement that every system will benefit from properly set up subwoofers
Scroll down to the 1/6th octave measurements in M Fremers room ( which is pretty decently treated) for the wonderful response of a measly $200K speaker below 300 Hz:http://www.stereophile.com/content/wilson-audio-specialties-alexandria-xlf-loudspeaker-measurementsMy 2¢. And I will leave it at that.I think a DSP is another $50k option from Wilson however Best,Anand.
This is correct...a fact. Every system will benefit from properly setup subwoofers. Again, just to be clear, I'm not saying that every system needs subwoofers but if you are going to use them, they need to be properly setup and the only way that's going to happen is with measurements. Last, if one doesn't use subwoofers, you still need to take measurements to make sure that the system is properly setup within the room. This is a fact whether you choose to believe it or not and I have lived it and many others have too.
I think this is where the confusion lies. The way your response was originally worded, it stated that every system would benefit from subwoofers (properly set up). I think what you're actually saying is that if a system has subwoofers, they need to be set up properly. If that's the case, I absolutely agree, and I agree that measurements will optimize the set up of any system, with subs or without. Gotta' love the english language.