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To Michael Anderson, I'm not sure what Earl is doing. I would expect that he isn't using a sub up to 150 Hz in a location that will be audibly distracting. Whatever he's doing, it probably arises from his "way outside the box" thinking, and it probably works very well.To ooheadsoo, let me see if I understand you correctly. You have two problems: Bass roughness above 30 Hz in the region that your main speakers cover, and lack of bass extension south of 30 Hz. Is that correct?If so, here are my suggestions: If practical, you might want to introduce some assymetry into your main speaker setup. Like, if you can rotate the whole speaker/listening position triangle by maybe 10 or 15 degrees either clockwise or counter-clockwise, that might help.I gather that you either now have, or soon will have, two subwoofers. If they have fourth-order filters, that will give you a bit more flexibility - but this might work either way. Okay I've never tried this, so it's just a thought exercise at this point (though it becomes a physical one if you decide to try it):Run both subs up fairly high, maybe 80 Hz ballpark, but not necessarily both to the same frequency. Place them both in reverse polarity with respect to the main speakers, and start them out fairly close to the main speakers. Don't turn them up too loud. I'm hoping that they will tend to "zig" where the main speakers "zag", and you can control how much of an effect they have with their volume controls. You won't get total cancellation; you'll get some cancellation and some reinforcement. In the region below 30 Hz hopefully you won't get any significant cancellation, so hopefully they'll reinforce this region adequately. It probably won't work perfectly your first try, and may never work perfectly - this is me just winging it here - but if you're going to be armed with two subs anyway it might be worth a try.Best of luck to you,Duke