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Hire Brian and get the room treated properly. Best move I and my customers did was to hire an acoustic engineer and change the room, speaker placement and the like. With a 10K preamp why are you fooling around ? Eh! Eh! charles
I see no mention of bass traps. I had a similar problem with suckout and after doing a lot of reading/research ended up trying ASC tube traps. Huge improvement; smoother, tighter, more tuneful bass, and less suckout. Bass went from being boomy or nonexistent depending where you are in the room to relatively even through out the room. Also, as mentioned earlier, try adjusting speaker position within the parameters of what is functionally practical for your your room.
I mentioned it earlier in the thread: http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=151187.msg1617107#msg1617107Advising is one thing. Whether the OP is able to implement the advice, based on his or her budget, and patience is another. I don't see anything ground breaking here. This is SBIR (or the Allison effect), pure and simple. And the methods that curtail SBIR have been published for decades. It's so common in home Hifi that I frankly find it boring to talk about so I post links instead as I did previously.Best,Anand.
Have you tried repositioning the speakers and/or listening position? Wondering how you know the above referenced set-up and treatment was "10 out of 10" in another room when you can't solve the apparent SBIR issues in your own room. You mentioned above trying a setup along the wide side of the room and that moving forward (versus normal position) helped. What was "forward" and what was "normal"? Again, diagrams/images would help.Agree about not jumping into subs. Subs are over-applied by some and over-avoided by others. A true subwoofer works at frequencies below typical speakers (say under 50 Hz). The frequencies you stated having problems are low to middle C (120 - 240 Hz, lower midrange). So subs aren't the answer.I see three possible solutions: move the speakers (recommended), replace the existing treatments with more effective ones (something similar to GIK 244 panels), or a mid-bass module like these -http://www.hsuresearch.com/products/mbm-12mk2.htmlhttp://www.diysoundgroup.com/midbass-module/mbm-12.html
Find a used pair of Allisons, which discussed your exact problem in their technical documentation. You can see the 'suckout', in the exact frequency range you're having the problem, in the measurements shown on this page of their catalog. I don't know why this approach isn't more widely adopted as the Allison patents are expired.Short of that unlikely approach, a small sub or two, located strategically, may offset the 'suckout'. I say 'small' because it's not a huge room and I assume you're not trying to create a 'boom room'.
I think the 10 out of 10 room was another room with similar speakers, not his room. I believe he's trying to get to a facsimile of that room, but I may have missed something. You've provided a lot of good advice on this thread JLM, maybe you might stick around?