0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 3429 times.
I have been thinking about adding a sub to my system and have a couple of questions that I was hoping I might get some help with:1. I listen to music 90+%. I have a 2 channel system (Ellis speakers - good to about 40-45hz, modwright sony player I use for both music and movies, audio note preamp, ps audio amp). Not sure if my room is large or not - it is 18 by 32 rectangle - 10 foot ceilings - pretty ideal for audio. Should I look at Maestro or Titan in a room of this size and for audio mostly?>>> You have a pretty large acoustical space. A Titan XL will certainly fill in the last octave below your Ellis' . . . but if you want to be sure you have plenty of clean output for any recording, at any level you want to play, I'd get a Maestro.2. I had a very large B&W sub until about a year ago. It was boomy - great for movies but to be honest I turned it off for music - couldn't dial it in for music with my speakers. Since adding the modwright player I love my mids and highs - but find the clean bottom end is just not there (could be my amp as well). Don't want to repeat my failed experiment with the previous sub though.>>> Our subs are known as some of the most musical and accurate you get own . . . once properly setup, you won't need to work about bass quality. Not only will you have the weight and impact of that last octave, you'll also improve the sense of space and ambience when playing many recordings.3. Putting a budget together for a sub. Do you need to purchase upgraded interconnects and power cords to use with ACI subs. What are people using - what is quality that comes with sub. Not even sure upgraded cords will make a difference with subs - hope this is not a can of worms question...>>> The DH Labs subsonic cable is a terrific interconnect at a very reasonable price. The Titan's power cord is not replaceable, the Maestro cable is and you could certainly try a DH Labs power cable and see what you think.Thanks for sharing your experience.David
It does not matter what kind of subwoofer you use. A better subwoofer will produce cleaner waves, so to speak - but any/all subwoofers will nonetheless produce standing waves in a given room, with the attendant problems of nodes or areas of attenuated SPL, plus antinodes or areas of "boosted" SPL, for frequency ranges depending on the room dimensions.There's also a lot of ripoff products out there (just like any product type in the audiophile marketplace). I bought some bass traps that were about 30% less than anything else out there of that same type - but they were still way too expensive, imo: $350 for UL94 rated polyurethane foam traps for the 4 corners of the room. Sheesh. They seem to help somewhat, but I still have the problem of the standing waves and nodes in the room center.Good luck.
<snip>Room treatments can make a huge difference . . . but you need a lot of treatment to be really effective at subwoofer frequencies.There's another option that can really tame the room beast . . . equalization. A device like R-DES can do a fantastic job of flattening out the room response . . . and it's generally a lot more affordable than acoustic room treatment.
I previously owned a PC Ultra and now own an ACI Maestro and I much prefer it to the Ultra, sealed design and all. The Ultra is a nice sub but the Meastro is in another league, as well it should be, IMO.I much prefer the sealed subs I've heard to the ported ones I've heard. I think transient response would be the big difference for me overall. The ported units just sound slower and more loose in comparision. The Ultra driver is a nice unit and the sub itself has many happy owners and I was one of them. I contemplated buying another to run duals but decided on a Meastro instead and have never looked back and may never go back to a ported design, unless it's done very well to match what I hear from a sealed design. If not wanting to spend alot more, based on my experience I would have sold my Ultra and bought 2 used Hsu VTF3 II and would have improved my sub system for just a tad more money. The VTF3 II is a great budget sub found used at around $500-$550 ea. two of those would do the average HT proud. Hell on a budget, the Mirage S12 were going for about $400, 4 of those EQ'd would be very satisfying for HT for under 2k...hmmm maybe I could go back to ported..nah.The subs I've recently had in my room:ACI MaestroHsu VTF3 IIParadigm Servo V2Velodyne DD18PC UltraMirage S12These are all good consumer units. I've also heard some really nice custom and DIY subs that outshine all of these just wish I had the space and sub budget. Hopefully infinite baffle is in my future.
I just wanted to point out, in case it isn't obvious, that standing waves will occur whether the source is a sub or main speakers. The difference is you have more placement options with a subwoofer to try and control the standing waves. Also, most people have to concede to the fact that their system is optimized for a certain "listening area". It would be near impossible to have the same frequency response throughout the whole room. That is why usually you optimize the placement of the sub first, to limit as many of the room modes as possible, then add room treatments to try and tame some of the peaks and nulls, and lastly, apply an eq to correct for anything left.
Deception by omission can be considered deception nonetheless, in many cases. I think this subwoofer sellers' information omission is one such case of deception in marketing. (If they are good enough to design and build great subwoofers, then they know about the standing wave problem. SVS does, that's for sure.)As noted, if I had known beforehand about this problem, I probably would have skipped the subwoofer, and perhaps bought a damn good set of headphones instead - because it will take thousands of $ to mitigate the standing wave problem using room treatments. (No, the equalizer will NOT cure it, the best it can do is to cure it in some room locations while creating new inaccuracies in others, because of spatial variations in the room response and the standing waves themselves. No, I'm not going to limit my listening position to one tiny spot in the room.)