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...The Sapphires are room sensitive to about 38 Hz (see Grillers comments on his thread). In a normal size room they require no sub. Your sealed boxes don't go that low...
...I have a Hofner Icon Bass and I can tell you I can localize it easily to 42 Hz and below with overtones. I have 6 electric guitars and 2 fine acoustics and can localize the low E anywhere...
'd recommend using an active electronic x-over. it should be more transparent than passive, imo. and, my experience has been that, even crossed as low as 60hz, a single sub is locatable in a system, unless centered directly between the speakers. also, two subs is the way to go for audio, imo - better soundstaging, less distortion for equal spl's, & easier to integrate into a room, w/the low bass coming from two distinct locations.
i'd recommend using an active electronic x-over. it should be more transparent than passive, imo. and, my experience has been that, even crossed as low as 60hz, a single sub is locatable in a system, unless centered directly between the speakers. also, two subs is the way to go for audio, imo - better soundstaging, less distortion for equal spl's, & easier to integrate into a room, w/the low bass coming from two distinct locations.doug s.
I've been stating for many years that stereo subs for two-channel is the way to go if funds and space allow. . . certainly agree there.However, I'm at a loss as to how an active XC with ICs, transistors, tubes, circuit boards, etc and lots of passive components is going to be MORE transparent than a simple passive filter with minimal components?
Hi Mike!Me too - it seems like electronic X-over couldn't possibly be as transparent sounding (?) - I am mainly interested in trying it due to the steeper crossover slope to the mains, and hopefully having level controls that can be used for fine dialing the non-remote-controlled stereo subs.Pardon me if this is a dumb question - but I'm wondering, are active X-overs ever used within powered subwoofers? I'm sure it would be more expensive to implement, and for all I know, might not sound as good. I noticed that active X-overs are used within pro-audio active speaker designs, with many associated (claimed) benefits - and since a powered subwoofer seems a type of active speaker, it got me wondering about this internal passive/active X-over question...
I received the 65hz filters yesterday and have been experimenting with my Vienna Acoustics Beethoven/Titan XL system since then. Until yesterday I had been using the speaker-level output adapters from my amp into the Titan and using the sub's crossover to fill in under the mains. Intermittantly I have tried stuffing socks in the Beethovens' rear ports to smooth the transition but best results so far have been achieved without them. To assess the sonic impact of the filters alone I disconnected the sub completely and inserted the filters into my Odyssey Khartago SE and hooked up my Cardas Golden Cross interconnects. A surprising amount of bass and warmth remained, but the addition of the filters flattened the soundstage and reduced treble detail pretty dramatically. I then added a solid Y-adapter to the outputs of my Quad CDP-2 that I use as a preamp and listened again before I hooked up the sub. The result was additional degradation similar to that of the filter alone.Undeterred, I finally hooked up the Titan and dialed it in using some of my favorite bass-integration music like "Fragile" from Kenny Barron's "The Moment" and "Twilight Song" from his "Night and the City" duet album with Charlie Haden. Wow. Really articulate, deep bass like I have never heard before and no midbass muddiness at all.My overall conclusion is that I can't accept the degradations that the filter and Y-adapter impose in order to achieve the improvement in the bass and midbass. It is simply a matter of personal priorities as I can understand how another person could feel just the opposite. I returned my system to its original state with the sub running off the amp outputs with no filters or Y-adapter and it sounds pretty darn good. Bass isn't as well integrated but the magical soundstage has returned.Andy