Glad to see that you are going to raise the x-over point to some where around 150-250. You will be happy that you are willing to bring it up. Take the load off the mids.
Tri-amping is a wonderment!
Regards,
barts
I bought 4 subwoofers and I'm absolutely not doing a DBA! Hah!
I just received shipments of 4 subwoofer drivers and they will not be going into a distributed bass array.
I'm replacing my left and right speaker stands with powering subwoofers with 2 subwoofer drivers each. I call them powering because they will be powering the 2-way monitors that will sit on top. Here's a beauty shot of the insides.
The amp has all the DSP power I could need to produce perfect speaker measurements. I wonder if JA at Stereophile would wax poetically if I priced them high enough??
Hey @barts - Honestly always a conversion more than subwoofer addition. The upper crossover point will depend on how they measure in cabinet and with the upper sections in place. The advantage of subwoofer appliance is freedom of location in the room. The disadvantage is you can't go higher than 80 Hz or so. |
You might want to check out Stack Audio Auva footers for the subwoofer (without using the spikes.) and their Auva EQ footers between the monitors and bass unit. If you need to keep the monitors low, consider 50mm Soundeck Mk2 Minis Damping Feet. They are about 3mm thick. Reviews for all of these are online, but I'm speaking from extensive personal experience. I don't comment often here, Erik, but I respect your contribution to this community. Thank you. |
@iseland "Plateamp": I moved my "plate amp'' out of the sub box into a separate housing. Its still a plate amp (components mounted on a plate), just a 'plate am in a different housing'. Given the same space for the sub, I wanted that extra volume for the driver, and it allows me to swap out amps/crossovers, or use the 'housing amp' to drive other subs. |