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HiI’ve tried to research the effect: driver Qt + baffle size = Qts? . . . With driver Qt of eg 0.3, it probably would be good if Qts went up to 0.5 if that optimizes impulse response, if other things are equal (are they?).
I also believe that it does relate to the nature of the b200, the connection with the damping factor of the old amp, the room size and shape, and the idiot with the ears!
I don't want to ruffle any purists feathers, but I would wager that double-blind testing would prove that most folks cannot hear a 1 or 2 db bump at an Fs below, say, 45 Hz. I'd also wager that under double-blind tests most would choose clean dipole bass with a Qts as high as 1.0 over a .5 monopole producing either lean, or flabby bass (depending on room dimensions).Hey, lots of purists also love tube amplification, which ironically "warms up" bass response via underdamping.