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The RM 40 does have a fair amount of area...but the mids only start at 166Hz....its the woofers im talking about...and i'm an ex-owner of the Legacy Focus with 3-12" woofers per side, crossing at 180Hz. I will not tell you that the Focus did many things well, but it DID do upper bass well if a bit bloated.I have heard few if any speakers that can recreate a plucked bass string or a small tom drum hit with similar realism.
Sure, you could put low bass subs in the corners for great, room enforced low bass, but you certainly would not want them to cross up around 200Hz. That would make for all sorts of weird phasing issues.
Take a look at most manufacturers top speakers...they typically do not use separate subs....and...the reason is that they want to crossover those woofers up high to maximize their upper bass presence.
you have to go to an expensive floorstander like the Vandersteen 5, that steadily decreases the driver diameter as the frequency increases. Audio is a compromised endeavor.that is what happened by accident-tweeter, dome mid, woofer ,woofer and one side of my large sub-12" is left channel, 15" is right.t-m-w-w-sw, cut off of 90 because thats all my rxv-1 will allow, have bass set to bolth and mains set to large.works good with each speaker having a easier time because of a smaller range to work in,but crossovers get bigger, more complicated and harder to do properly(thats why i didnt do it ), and power also becomes a issue now, but i got that covered.
I also recall Brian Cheney saying 'round here that having a "beard" or flat surface in the front of the stand was a Good Thing. Although Val's website suggests the opposite for best imaging performance.
a few thoughts...in fact *many* mfrs' top models have separate sub modules, designed to either flank, or go under the monitors.+++++MOST manufacturers DO NOT have monitors as their top models!============having subs flanking the monitors, or being used as stands, seems to give a more accurate soundstage, ime, but won't necessarily give the most bass response, as room reinforcement isn't optimized.+++++Again, you're talking bass, im talking upper bass, and in some folks jargon, it is lower midrange!============if i were using only one sub, besides having the ((at least 24db/octave) x-over set as low as possible (which i do w/two subs, as well), i would have the sub centered exactly between the speakers, & in the near-field, if possible. "lowboy" style subs would work best for this, obviously.============+++++Not sure what you mean by "lowboy", so i assume it is a floor firing driver. I must reiterate that those only work reasonably well with the lowest freqs..like 60Hz and below.brian cheney suggests actively crossing over the the rm40's low-mid frequencies w/a 24db/octave x-over, at ~200hz. this may give better upper bass response. and, as the latest fst tweets cross over at 7khz instead of the spiral ribbons' 10khz, perhaps the midrange ribbons' performance is also improved yust above 200hz...===========I wonder why he recommends 24db/octave when the stock one is reported to be 6db/oct. I assume it is to keep phase alignment, and that 24 is common with active xovers. good upper bass response may in fact be driver-quality dependent, not yust driver size/quantity dependent. i listen to a *lot* of percussion music, & i get excellent results (in a large room) w/monitors w/a focal inverted tweet crossed over to a single 7" eton kevlar-sandwich driver. (similar to the 5.5" drivers that gr-research is using in their criterion's & diluceo's.) the monitors are crossed over to subs flanking the monitors.============+++++The Legacy focus used twin 7"Eton kevlars, and yes I think they did a great job, but I think there was some audible residual ringing with the kevlar drivers. These great drivers were also in the Legacy Whisper (quantity=4 per side!) and that was a lesson in area...you owe yourself an audition of these.....all you would need is a good tweeter to replace that crappy dome and ribbon!...but the presence and imaging was OUTsanding.Sure, we are talking big money, but i stress AREA again. Yes, it all starts with quality drivers, but thats only part of the equation. Why do you suppose planar speakers are so popular....they suck for resolution and dynamics, and bass...but its the sheer area of radiation that gives them the realism across the range.Frankly i have not heard ANY system with a single 6.5-7" driver handling freqs down below 150Hz that come close to reproducing percussion accureately. UNLESS you are sitting within a few feet of them, I dont see how! This is the trouble I have with big name(read big $) small speaker guys like B&W...to me all these sound anemic at best.ymmv,doug s.
I think some of the problems nathanm is trying to resolve is exactly what i've talking about with upper bass. Ive been thinking about doing exactly the same thing with RM40s...(except the subs would be off to the sides) since both times Ive heard them, they sound thin in the upper bass...and by that i mean in the 150-200 Hz area. It is by far the best speaker I have heard otherwise.
We have to agree beforehand that we're all talking compromises and personal preferences. There are very few absolute truths in audio, it is mostly about what set of compromises pleases you more than (the many) others. Can somebody say the strange-looking (I think is great modern art) $44,000 B&W Nautilus, with 12" woofers and 5" flat lower mid (crossed over at 220Hz) is not a great speaker? Or the $41,500 Rockport Antares, with the very famous Skaaning 13" and 6" (crossed over at a low 130Hz!) drivers? I suppose some would still prefer a huge planar, but how can one say those speakers aren't any good? Say, four 6-inchers would move a lot more air, but is that the only valid compromise? No amount of Legacy midranges would hold a candle to either of those speakers, in my opinion. The only problem is that to make all the compromises reasonably acceptable, they cost a lot of money.Val
Yes, i did hear the RM40 both biamped and single amped, but i couldnt tell you if the toggle switch was in correct position. One place used a B&K amp, and the other used a Cinepro for the bass and something i dont remember for the uppers.I did do some moving of the mid and tweet pot while listening, and couldnt get the results i wanted. Sure wish I could audition your setup. Curious if you use a sub or augmented bass with your setup??There is no question about the smoothness of the RM40s...some of the most coherent and smooth over the freq range speakers ive had the priviledge of hearing. Smoothness (or the lack of) is THE reason i no longer own the Legacys. BUT..i moved to twin 6.5 PHL/Raven drivers and and frankly, i cant stand to listen to it for more than a minute....and thats mostly because it just sux in the whole bass region....albeit more smooth than the Focus.Hell, I REALLY like these speakers, with that ONE exception,....upper bass, and impact realism. Maybe I should just buy the darn things and find out for myself!Q