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Well I simply can't believe the output is only to 50hz, that's just silly. And regardless, if 30 or close to it can be achieved with some adjustments, longer, stuffed port as Duke suggests, then I think I may still attempt it. The Klipsch Promedia sub was doing 30hz 8 or 9 years ago. Not loudly like a more legitimate subwoofer, but definitely there... and you could daisy chain several of them. Matter of fact, for a while, Klipsch had an add-on single 8" sub for the promedia system and you could daisy chain 16 of them together and make a wall of bass. The 12" wasn't as well receieved by the reviewer, but you're probably right, having 4 of them, less effort, better quality. The problem is the ship date for the 12 is some time in Jan and I think I'll probably be finishing up first go round on my room treatments, my speakers will be modded, and I'll be interested in checking out some OB bass at that time. If I do this at all, it will be in the coming weeks, to a month, and it will have to be the 8's or nothing. If it works out, the 8's can drop sufficiently low, and I can maximize them with any sort of simple mods, and they sound good in that swarm configuration, heck I might just run them for a while. Who knows, running a bunch of them like that might end up being more than decent, sort of a bare-minimum for ultra smooth bass for music in a small room like mine. My MMG's will take an apparently huge upswing in quality in about two months and needs will change.
I'd push you a little further in that direction and second your thought that the USD250 would be better spent on a measurement setup If you do that you will have plenty of things to learn about and occupy you until the time when your mains deserve better subs.However, I would suggest that you then immediately get a chunky pro amp with DSP (or a pro amp and a separate DSP unit - Behringer, miniDSP etc). Again, you are going to need it for the Brahmas anyway. Then put those Brahmas in a flat baffle each on either side of the listening position and work on it. I think you'll be amazed.My 2c
See what totally smooth in room bass is like.
^And that's why I'm looking at these Doug. As far as quality, yeah, I bet one of these things alone would be terrible, and definitely not mate well with my MMG's, lol, I wouldn't even consider it. But four of them, that has to change things drastically. All with their gain set low, just idling in their sweetspot. Smooth flat bass.
In regards to the Yamaha YST-SW216 subwoofer, I don't like the idea of only two switch positions for crossover adjustment and I think they could do better than a 50W @ 10% THD amplifier. This is what the frequency response looks like for each of the two switch positions: Although I own several Yamaha products, this isn't one I would buy. Steve
In my past experiences with subs, the biggest problem that I always had was getting a seamless integration with the mains. I'm not talking about getting the crossover frequencies just right or balancing the levels between the mains and the room perfectly. I'm talking about making the picture appear as though it was all painted on the same piece of canvas. I could always tell that there was a subwoofer doing something in the room unless I turned it (them) down so low that I wondered why I was using a sub at all.I have never been "swarmed", but I am betting that there is a minimum quality requirement needed to do it right. And if everything is just right, I would imagine that there is still a trade off between getting better bass extension in the room verses getting a more coherent picture of the music.Is the "swarm" idea really a free lunch in this regard?
WOW!!! That's the raw listener position response, that must be incredible. Which subs are you running?
If they worked on OB, I probably would be in bass heaven already, but it looks like they won't.