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1140 was just off the top of my head. I may have gotten it wrong. It is the speed of sound in air. However, this speed various with temperature and humidity so you might see 1135 or something similar depending.Try this link, plug in 80F and 75F.http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/HBASE/sound/souspe.html
It is an incredibly small space. I believe the room is about 10' x 6' ...
It is of some interest that1140/6 = 190 #speed of sound / 6ft.190 / 4 = 47.5190 / 3 = 63.3190 * 7/8 = 166.25These are the exact points of your listed peeks and dips
The best sound I could get in college was from headphones, thank about it.
I thought of a couple of things after my last post.Many microphones are not designed for the full range sound needed to do a frequency response analysis. This could possibly explain the analysis not showing bass below 47Hz. Or pehaps you have some kind of room null below that point.
200 Hz seems like too high of a crossover point.80Hz is the THX standard.Anything above about 120 is going to start to capture the low end of human voice which should stay in the mains.Many subs don't do well over 100Hz, but yours could be designed differently.What size midrange cone do you have in monitors? My first reaction is that most monitors go down to at least 80Hz. If the cones are smaller than 5" then it may be a problem.Try the crossover at 80Hz. Drop the volume on the sub down. It should be at the point where if you drop it any further you notice a thinness to the sound. Bass is a strange thing, less can often be more.
I bought an inexpensive floor stander recently and became disappointed with it after a while. I suppose for the price it sounds pretty good. I recently ran an experiment with an old car woofer sub I had lying around and some extremely cheap single driver 4" inch cones. I am having better luck with this setup than the floorstander. It seems to me that high quality 3 way floorstanders are just very expensive. I am thinking at the lower price ranges that a sub/satellite system is the way to go.
However, I am not that experienced with a wide range of setups, so don't take my advice too seriously. I am just kind of hoping that with some tweaking you may discover that your subwoofer is not so bad after all. But you have lived with, so maybe you know there is no hope.
I really wish Parts Express sold a speaker kit just like that one, but with two 6.5' drivers like this:http://www.speakerbuilder.net/web_files/Projects/D3/dayton3.htmThat design (with two of the Dayton 6.5") seems pretty popular online, but the kit you liked does look pretty interesting. I don't know if I really like the look of those stands, but Parts Express has some others that I kind of like.