AJ Soundfield
Well-known member
I'm going to hide in his car trunk and slip in too! :hey:You're always welcome bud!
I'm going to hide in his car trunk and slip in too! :hey:You're always welcome bud!
I'm going to hide in his car trunk and slip in too! :hey:
The last few years I was buying full range speakers and getting frustrated when my room would roll off steeply around 80 hz with a recovery down 10 db at 60 then down 40db by 25hz. Some 'Full range' speakers were -40 db by 70 hz! anyhow I got my dolly and shlepped my massive dual 12" powered sub from the tv room into my basement listening room and I was able to get really smooth even bass down to 20 hz in less than a half hr of positioning. I hated it! seriously, my house rattles and creaks, heat ducts were wailing, furniture was rattling. it sucked PERIOD
My experiment cured me though and i'm quite happy with how musical a pair of speakers with smooth roll off after 50-60hz sounds. Maybe you guys living in bomb shelters can handle subs but I don't like listening to how crummy my house was built when i'm trying to enjoy music.
Hhello everyone. IMHO well integrated subwoofers are awesome for music. OTOH poorly integrated subwoofers are a disaster. Using subs to fill in or augment the bottom octave (20-40Hz) really makes the music blossom. The sense of space goes up by at least an order of magnitude. If you hold your hands out pointing that edge of the soundstage with just two speakers and then switch the subs on your arms will move out another 20 degrees.
There are lots of ways to try and integrate the subs. The higher in frequency you go the harder it is to get the subs to blend properly. if the speakers are being ran full range (no X-over) then I suggest keeping the sub X-over below 60Hz but YMMV. If you use the CR-1 to cross over the mains then you can go higher. Last year the at the Lone Star Audiofest I used a two way speaker crossed over at 75Hz with the JC-1 to a pair of JL F113's. The bass was crazy good in that small hotel room. You could play something with stand up bass and no one could detect that he subs were on. Then we could switch to something like Depeche Mode and vibrate the walls.
Good luck with your subwoofer adventure.
I've owned a number of very good speakers, but only one actually produced bass that got my attention. That was back in the 1980's with the Infinity Beta system that had separate bass and separate mid-high frequency towers. That is until I recently installed a JL Audio F212v2 and CR1 Active Crossover in my system.
The bass is now not only prodigious, but after adjusting for phase alignment at the crossover point (80 hz.) has a timbre complimenting the main speakers. The Raidho D3 imaging has been spectacular from the beginning, but now the mids and highs have an airiness and definition that makes the instruments and voices sound like they're suspended in air and in the room.
JL Audio customer service has been phenomenally patient and knowledgeable helping me integrate the subwoofer with the main speakers. It's been too long ago to remember any real detail of the Infinity Beta, just a general impression of awesomeness. But I think the setup I have now has a full range impressiveness not unlike what I remember with the Beta's.
When the room was being designed I was advised there are few speakers at any price point that wouldn't benefit from a well integrated subwoofer with a good crossover. The JL Audio F212v2 and CR-1 have made me a believer.
I'm interested in getting better integration with subwoofers on the new Rivals.
When Greg was over on Friday, we both worked with the JL Audio e112 for about an hour, trying different settings (crossover on the sub between 40-60Hz, the Rivals go down to 32Hz at -10dB).
No matter what we did, there was always the sense that there was a separate speaker there providing LF detail and presence. It was pretty distracting in most cases, but there's no doubt that those low frequencies add to the overall weight of the sound.
We were running the Rivals with Greg's stock crossover points, full range (separate pre out to the JL).
At this point I'm thinking of running an experiment with my SVS SB16 Ultra, which is connected to my Anthem pre-pro. Possibly running optical out from the M Scaler into the Anthem's DAC and using the room correction on the full system (correct up to 300 Hz), then re-connecting the Rivals to the tube amp and turning off my Monolith so the Anthem is sending the corrected bass from the pre/pro and the Rivals are getting unaltered full-range signal from the tube amp.
There are 2 obvious problems with this, one being that the DSP is going to filter the subwoofer based on the upstream EQ it applies to the Rivals, so integration is NOT going to be the same when running the Rivals sans-DSP between 32-300Hz. The other is that I'll have 2 pre gain structures to sort out between the tube amp and the Rivals and the Anthem and the subwoofer.
It's things like this that make me want to just enjoy the system as 2 channel only, but I know how much a well-integrated sub can add to the overall sound.
I wish Greg would make an ELF for the Rivals!
Thanks Jack, that sounds like a great deal. I'll definitely look into the Rhythmik for sure when the time comes.