0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 13579 times.
Tube subs: These are sonoflex cardboard. They solve problems of enclosure size and standing waves but: these cardboard tubes are not that rigid, and not superior to a solid conventional sub cabinet. They have decent measured output, but are not as tight at the bottom as decent conventional subs. They also do not produce the same type impact as a conventional sub, but a more "filling" bass.Did you notice both SVS and HSU have been building BOXES lately?
Tube subs: These are sonoflex cardboard. They solve problems of enclosure size and standing waves but: these cardboard tubes are not that rigid, and not superior to a solid conventional sub cabinet. They have decent measured output, but are not as tight at the bottom as decent conventional subs. They also do not produce the same type impact as a conventional sub, but a more "filling" bass. Did you notice both SVS and HSU have been building BOXES lately?
Both the VTF-3 and SVS 16-46PC could play louder at 20 Hz than the limits noted, but in doing so they generated a fair amount of port noise. The TN1220HO and F1800RII were right up against their amp-output ceilings during those tests, and both were clean.
Against Hsu’s own TN1220HO model (driven by the new 250-watt Hsu amp mentioned previously), the results were identical in terms of output at both 30 Hz and 20 Hz, although at fairly high levels the TN1220HO was cleaner at 20 Hz. At 30 Hz, they paced each other right up to very high levels. With music, the subs were functionally identical sounding at sane listening levels.
I think the only way it'd sound remarkably different is if you were crossing over at a fairly high frequency... that would make the imaging change a bit so that the sub became part of what's producing the 'sonic image'. In that case, positioning and firing direction would be more important.
hehe... interesting thread...IMHO, any *edit* well designed */edit* DIY sub of any design type will beat any equally priced, equally designed commercial sub. Thats reality. DIY saves money when talking speakers.15 inch, 12 inch, box, sealed, ported, tube... no difference in my opinion IF we are talking same $$ spent on finished commercial products. Add DIY into the mix and it suddenly becomes interesting as tubes are way cheaper than boxes to build so there is more $$ left for where it really counts ...