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Thanks for your input. I am beginning to understand about multiple woofers or "Swarming" subs. That's a great term BTW.
If I were to start a swarm, what is the best way to determine how many subs and where to put them?
This is the room I am dealing with. It's 18' wide and 12' to the sloped ceiling. 12.5' to the couch and behind the couch is the kitchen with an additional 15' and then a family room off to the side. It is a really big open area.
A general laymen's thought on those "white papers" : It seems like they are suggesting the point of multiple subs is to get an even response for multiple listeners throughout the room. Or for one listener wondering around the room. Toole mentioned this over and over in his papers anyway. So if you are the only one in the room that really cares about an even response (of amplitude vs. frequency) and you don't mind sitting in the same chair, it might be a lot of trouble for nothin'.
I would love to hear a multi-sub set up like this at the next show. I guess it's too hard/too much trouble to do it at a show because I have never seen it done yet.
What would a total lack of room reflections even sound like? We're all more conditioned to being in rooms than large halls, or outside, so embrace the room ....
Embrace near field listening. I follow the Cardas formula for room shape/listening.....
Went to Harmon's "White Paper" tab and there is a lot of really great info there. It's surprises me that they would actually publish that kind of data for general use. Thanks Harmon.
...I don't know how many other speaker companies are working in this direction...
I don't know how many other speaker companies are working in this direction, but it doesn't seem to be very popular in the regular audiophile circles.
They're out there. But hopelessly outmatched by the "treatment" business folks and unshakable preconceptions. Despite all the evidence to the contrary. IOW, perfect for the intended market. A few to choose from if you want to utilize the room beneficially, less if you want to ignore it (the benchmark imo: http://www.stereophile.com/content/gradient-revolution-loudspeaker-john-atkinson-march-1997 http://www.regonaudio.com/Gradient%20Revolution%20Loudspeaker.html ).Preferences and exposure to live acoustic music has the largest impact.cheers,AJ