Subwoofers and Crossovers.


My system is Cary DMS-550 / Luxman L-507uxii / Spendor D7.2

 

After researching I decided to add an active crossover and two stereo subs to the system.

 

  1. I am looking at JL Audio CR-1 as the crossover.  This will take the pre-out from the Luxman and feed mains-in and setup the Luxman as separates. Is there anything else that I should look at?  I am only looking at analog solutions.
  2. After looking a REL, Rythmic, SVS, Martin Logan and JL, I am leaning towards getting two JL Dominion D110s.  Would these subs be sufficient or should I be getting JL E110s? I won’t be using the internal crossovers, so primary concern is fidelity.
  3. If I am unable to treat the room properly, I may be introducing a DSP solution just for the subwoofers.

 

I am looking for some advice from people who have walked this path before me on both the active crossover and the quality of D110s. 

I would appreciate any advice on this process of integrating subwoofers into a two channel audio system.

dimbhaka

dimbhaka, unless your digitizing the entire bandwidth the difference between the digital processing of the SHD and the analog of the CR-1 on the extra low frequency may be slightly noticeable in a side by side comparison due to the speed of the processing. It’s not going to suck the analog out of the presentation the way most full bandwidth processing can.

I found the JL Audio CR-1 Manual to be quite informative with my subwoofer setup. It dramatically improved the presentation of my Velodyne DD Plus subwoofers using Velodyne’s extensive Manual optimization adjustments and presets. Your in the Mob now, have fun with it.

@m-db I am not getting the CR-1, so whatever signature the SHD leaves, it will be across the spectrum.

SHD looks very flexible and I am seeing myself setting two crossovers one at around 110/120 for general purpose and one around 170/180 for female vocals; there are four presets in SHD. This would have been almost impossible with CR-1 as a change in crossover frequency means new phase alignment.

such a crime to high pass the Spendors but I do hope it works out for you. difficult for any sub to keep up with them.  

@avanti1960 , my main aim in high passing the Spendors is to eliminate intermodulation(amp) and doppler distortion(speakers). I will also be setting one of the presets to disable the subs and run Spendors full range.  I will post my experience in this thread. 

Also, I have been reading such good things about bi-amping and adding subs with high passing the mains is another form of bi-amping.

PS. In this journey, I read your subwoofer threads in the other forum.

Yes, thank you.  I have learned a lot in my journey!   

Some speakers work well with the right subs, some do not, and ultimately if you value speed, dynamics and lightening burst timing no subs are best.  

Not everyone values that however.  

Good luck! 

I had Rythmik FM8s and miniDSP SHD delivered by Saturday and have been fiddling with REW and miniDSP software until now. The subs are flanking the Spendors on the inside.

Myt steps in setting them up.

1. Level matching the subs to the mains. Initially I put them one notch above zero, but dialed them back to zero.

2. Measured subs and the mains one channel at at time at different crossovers ranging from 80 to 150. Left channel was fine all across, but the right channel was not performing well between 100 and 120. So I had to choose either 90 or 140/150 and I decided to cross them over at 150 with 24db/octave.

3. Time delaying the mains was the most time consuming step, as I had to learn the process. After several measurements and methods, the results I had was 7.5ms for the left and 7ms for right channel.  I decided to set both of them to 7.5ms

4. Finally ran Dirac Live to flatten the response curve with a little boost in the bass area.

I am going to leave it with these settings for some time.

I am noticing two immediate benefits:1. There is more bass with more texture and the drum beats have a sharper starts/stops. 2. Vocals are clearer without being effected by base notes.

I am grateful  to the forum members for all the help and guidance.

@dimbhaka thanks for reporting back with your results!  This is a very interesting solution and I hope you'll report back again in a few months after these changes settle in. I look forward to your update and I'm pretty sure I'm not alone.

When I measured the time difference previously, I had 7.5ms for the left and 7ms for the right main/sub matching. It is probably related a little asymmetry in my room.   So I was looking for another way to calculate the time delays for the mains and I came across an article by Merlijn van Veen.

I set the main and sub with baffles in the same plane and setup my microphone directly pointed directly at them from around 5ft. I took three measurements each for the sub and the main.

First I used another method I read elsewhere to calculate the time difference using the step graph in overlays window. I calculated the average of all the nine combinations and arrived at a time delay of 6.06ms for the main.

Then I followed Merlijn's method:

1. The phase lines of the subs and mains were clustered together respectively. So that gave me confidence in my measurements.

2. The phase offset was 305 degrees at the crossover frequency of 150Hz; so they are off by 0.85 cycle.

3. Full cycle time is 6.67ms and 85% of it is 5.67ms.  This is the delay if the baffles are coplanar.

4. I positioned the speakers where I had them since before the subs came in and placed the subs 6 inches behind them. As the mains are ahead, I had to add the time for 6 inches which came out to be 0.44ms.

5. Time delay set in the miniDSP SHD is 6.11ms(5.67+0.44).

So far  the improvement is good with a cleaner mid-bass.