Bass- at what frequency does it change from sounding like a string to just a low tone?


I have two subs and speakers I like. I have little experience  comparing them to anything  else. As the frequency of a given note goes lower, at some point in my system it stops sounding like an instrument making the sound and instead it just sounds like the sound. I’m not crazy about this, but maybe that’s how it is for everyone?

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Showing 2 responses by jon_5912

My guess is the room has much more to do with making strings sound like just a note than the speaker.  Most rooms have huge peaks and valleys in the deep bass.  I 15db resonance peak will swamp the texture and that peak will be different in every room.  

@waytoomuchstuff IMO the way ATC rolls off the low frequencies is better than the usual way.  They roll off slowly starting at a higher frequency.  This is probably a marketing disadvantage but in most practical situations it's a plus.  A speaker that slowly rolls off the bass has far fewer troubling room bass problems while still being capable of great punch and greater dynamics than a speaker that tried to be flat to 30 or 40hz.  It allows you to place them where they're optimal for the rest of the frequency spectrum and fill in with subwoofers what isn't there.  I've got a pair of custom built 110s I bought used about 10 years ago.  I've had them in in at least 5 locations and they're very easy to just set and forget.  The 3 inch mid doesn't have the beaming issues a larger driver would so the in-room response is good and they don't upset room nodes nearly as much as you might expect.