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I try.The software was from some Kid's Corner on an educational site which made me laugh.How tough can it be?
This thread belongs in the acoustics circle.
I was able to deal with several bass suck-out regions at once when I implemented a second subwoofer. Based on this limited application of multiplying subs to eliminate peaks/nulls, I can definitely see how the multiple distributed subs approach could be quite successful. Two subs and a DEQ2496 was enough for me to get +/- 3db, a swing of about 6db between 20-100 hz for my seating position - though still pretty damned uneven for the rest of the room. It took a lot of playing with the DEQ and REW as well as some location play for the subs, but I'm satisfied.
Your 6 dB bass window is very good. My window is 6 dB with no EQ and no bass treatments. If you're completely satisfied and have no further curiosity on the subject, great. If curious, and if time permits (estimate one hour), readers might benefit knowing if my setup instructions further improve your specific system with two subs. I suspect yes. Preliminary questions: What is main speaker natural bass f3? What type bass loading? (sealed, reflex, OB, etc.) Do you employ hp filter on main speakers? If yes: what pole and slope?
Thank you gents for your replies. This is quite helpful. REW will be the next step, indeed. It has been a while since I measured in my room (I have since changed speakers, added a sub, switched-out furniture/area rug and listening position over the course of a year or more), so I made crude measurements to see where I'm at. Overall, I don't feel the majority of the measurements are all that bad; the +/-6 dB swing from 'reference' as measured at 75 dB is very consistent. I was actually quite shocked, given that I am forced to listen along the long wall at this point. Alex, I feel you may be right about the speaker boundary interference for the nulls. At first, I instinctively blamed floor bounce, but there's an area rug that fills in the floor between the speakers and the couch. However, there are 5 bay windows behind my setup/speakers that jut outward, with a flat sort of built-in shelf that houses books, pictures, etc. The windows have wooden blinds on each of them. I typically have them closed during listening sessions, but I'm certain that when I measured and re-measured all of this, I had two or three of the blinds open. Perhaps this is the culprit, or no? And the peaks, well, not certain how to address those yet. Maybe a combination of speaker re-arranging by a few inches here and there, combined with subwoofer? Like I say, I feel like the measurements are respectable; and I hate to alter the results too much to the point that I then have to address wild variations in those. However, I'm also realistic about how much time this can take to get it right, so I'm willing to experiment.