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you sometimes see strange things like a null but also a resonance at a specific frequency, that won't show up in a flat response graph.
....I had the subs crossed at 98 Hz @ 24 dB slope. They're currently at 72 Hz.
Since you have a finished room I would do exactly as you are doing now, find the best locations for the speakers and listening position for both imaging and bass response. In an untreated room like this it becomes DSP time. Drop the peaks between 45 and 125Hz to be more level with the frequencies above them. Then drop the peak below 35Hz. You will now have a much smaller dip at 40Hz and be much smoother every place else. Now you can play with room treatment to dial in your imaging. But, use very thick absorption at the reflective zones to also aid in the bass control. When that is done you can reduce the DSP corrections if needed.To correct a dip at 40Hz requires a lot of treatment that you may not have the space for. That is why I left it for last. It is time to first find out what is possible. I would go to Lowes and buy bundles of mineral wool, usually 4' x 2' x 16" for around 50-$60. Buy quite a few and remember that you can return them for a full refund. These are just temporary tools. There is no need to remove their plastic because we are only concerned about bass. Now place them in stacks around the room, such as the corners. Remember that we are not concerned at this point about what is practical, just what is possible. Depending upon the results of your experiments you can decide on what you want to do. If it works you can keep some of that material and create your own controls, or return it all and go commercial.
This is excellent advice.
Nice work thus far!When looking at room data, I actually don't usually spend much time looking at flat graphs.... I'm much more interested in the time-domain measurements (Spectrogram, waterfall graphs, ETC/Impulse, RT60 etc) as these give us a lot more info about what the room actually sounds like. Make sure you are also looking at the waterfall graphs too -- you sometimes see strange things like a null but also a resonance at a specific frequency, that won't show up in a flat response graph. But you are definitely on the right track -- even in an untreated room REW is useful for placement. There is a relationship between many of the peaks/nulls and the positioning of each speaker and nearby boundaries (walls/ceiling/floor), not to mention the subwoofer electronics (phase, crossover slopes/freqs etc). Once you get the setup dialed in, treatments (bass traps) are the real game-changer.
Why is the crossover frequency set so high? The X-Statics are -3db down at 48Hz for an average room.My speakers are -3db down at 34Hz and my sub's crossover is set to 30Hz. The overlap between the speakers and sub is seamless and the sub doesn't overload the room. I only notice the sub when there is really low frequencies, the rest of the time it stays out of the way. The only way I know the sub is turned on is the recording's soundfield is larger and includes more low level information like room echo.
Room is 21.8 ft long, 13.6 ft wide, and an 8 ft ceiling...
... see quoted post with illustration of EQ results ...