Subwoofer Question


Could having just one subwoofer (REL T/7x)with the crossover set around 60hz pull my image to the side that the sub is on?

maprik

 

As others have already said, the low pass filter on a sub determines at what rate the sub's output vs. frequency rolls off. If the sub is set at 60Hz and has a 1st-order low pass filter, 120Hz will be reproduced at only 6dB down from 60Hz, 180Hz at 12dB down. In contrast, with a 4th-order filter and a setting of 60Hz, 6dB down is not reached until 240Hz.

The higher the crossover frequency chosen, the more steep should the low pass filter be (1st-order is 6dB/octave, 2nd-order 12dB, 3rd-order 18dB, 4th-order 24dB). And of course the lower the crossover frequency, the more shallow can be the low pass filter. Conversely, the steeper low pass filter, the higher can be the crossover filter. When I spoke with Roger Modjeski (Music Reference) about mating subs with the Quad ESL, he told me he used a 4th-order filter and a crossover frequency of 100Hz with his.

 

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I am a +1 on having two subwoofers.
Transformed so many different anomalies in my system. I have one up front with the LCR and then the other back behind me about 12-14 feet away.  

After using an active crossover and 4 passive woofers I built based on a design by Roger Modjeski I decided to try active subwoofers and purchased 4 KEF KC62 subs with balanced force drivers. KEF has an interesting take on setting LP and HP filters that you can read here: 

https://us.kef.com/blogs/news/understanding-lpf-and-hpf-settings?srsltid=AfmBOoofYdV0rzjlbr3BQq-70TAKqvj5oU1Qz-pdCBZRW6kppBi5c54c

Setting the LP and HP at different frequencies worked well with my box speakers, but not so much with my Quad ESL which have a resonance peak at 90 Hz, so setting HP and LP at 100 Hz was ideal. As the KEF article states with a 4th order filter the highest attenuation of the signal will be -24 dB at one octave above for the LP and one octave below for the HP. So for 60 Hz that will be either 120 Hz and 30 Hz.