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I take it that the blue and orange-ish curves are prior to the TACT? What about after the TACT? Does the TACT allow you to assign the curve you want, and also show the resonse with the TACT in the loop. I pulled up my ETF plot of my RM40s, but it's a bit hard to compare -- ETF uses absolute dB readings. I'll try and post my readings when I get time.Anyway, it doesn't sound boomy uncorrected? From your curves, if you add the sub towers and the reg towers, the below 500Hz seems as if it'd be very high.
I've been working my ass off this week and have only had a few hours to play with the TacT and the new speakers. Here is the latest measurement curve, after moving the speakers around a little. Remember these are in-room measurements at the listening position, not nearfield or quasi-anechoic measurements like you see in manufacturer specs or magazine reviews.I am running the main channels full range, as designed. There are room suckouts at 54hz & 110hz. Later this year the room will be expand ...
I'll go out on a limb and hazard the guess that you don't have suckouts at 54hz & 100hz but rather have gain just below those frequencies. I.E. the valley is more the anechoic response tapering off slowly and there are four gain related humps from the room. ~40hz, 80hz, 160hz, 240hz. This is a guess but I'd bet a small sum on it. If you were to bring these humps down with traps or whatever else then you sub towers would compensate for the slow slope from the main towers to give a flat sum.
Why not reconfigure the impedance of the subwoofers so that you can easily drive them with any amp? They already are rated 9db higher in sensitivity than the mains and placing them towards the corners will increase the output another 6db.You've got plenty of sensitivity to burn.
I'd be afraid that they'd saturate given the amount of current needed to drive such large bass towers.
Since the ports are on the front it would be easy to do a nearfield measurement on the subwoofers. If you place the microphone halfway between the center of the adjacent port and center of one of the woofers you can use the TacT to measure the subwoofer's anechoic response. This will allow you to see where the problems are with the room.
It is probably low order plus a notch filter.
Quote from: JoshKI'd be afraid that they'd saturate given the amount of current needed to drive such large bass towers.That's why I haven't tried them. Paul seemed to think they would work okay, but it just doesn't seem right putting a transformer with magnet wire in front of a subwoofer. I think the answer is a new amp. There are plenty of AB and D models that can comfortably drive this load. A local dealer is actually selling a Krell KSA250 which may be worth a look. That would make a sweet bass amp though it does run hot.