The answers are all over the site on the various subwoofer threads. Whole bunch of them recently. Look especially for the comments from noble_100 (Tim) and Audiokinesis (Duke) as they have the most experience. Audiokinesis especially does this professionally and still somehow finds time to post his always highly informative comments.
Basically, the number of subs is much more important than which subs. More subs spread around the room produces more modes making for smoother bass. EQ, room correction, whatever you want to call it, can at best make things better at one point but only at the cost of making things worse somewhere else. The big modes you get from few subs or EQ is energy that takes time to dissipate, which while that is happening is heard as muddy or slow bass. So smooth bass is faster bass. For smooth bass you want 3 or even better 4 subs.
So don’t worry which sub. Which sub doesn’t hardly even matter. Unlike the movie, in which case you definitely want Leon: The Professional and not the shorter The Professional.
And sorry, too late now to edit but the line is, "EVERYONE!!!!!" https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110413/?ref_=tt_ch
I like these calm little moments before the storm. It reminds me of Beethoven.
Basically, the number of subs is much more important than which subs. More subs spread around the room produces more modes making for smoother bass. EQ, room correction, whatever you want to call it, can at best make things better at one point but only at the cost of making things worse somewhere else. The big modes you get from few subs or EQ is energy that takes time to dissipate, which while that is happening is heard as muddy or slow bass. So smooth bass is faster bass. For smooth bass you want 3 or even better 4 subs.
So don’t worry which sub. Which sub doesn’t hardly even matter. Unlike the movie, in which case you definitely want Leon: The Professional and not the shorter The Professional.
And sorry, too late now to edit but the line is, "EVERYONE!!!!!" https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110413/?ref_=tt_ch
I like these calm little moments before the storm. It reminds me of Beethoven.