elangoas
Well-Known Member
Great!
As long as you know what you are doing.
Its not just the HUGE subs that you have got there, but the whole armory that I can see in the background...!!!
Wow and just wow!
Personally I am against electronic tuning of the room.
If I speak loudly (not shout) and hear no echo, even a small one, then I am ok with the room as is.
If there is an echo, then I would treat it lightly for stereo and moderately for surround.
I would straighten out the driver response, if required, from the near field response.
If it has small quirks, I won't even bother to do that.
That's it. That way, I am not fiddling with the work of the music director to iron out flaws in my room acoustics or in my signal chain.
But that's just me.
Thank you for your views..
With subs working below 120Hz, they should dissapear anyway, no?
For now, i have crossed it to 80Hz to mains.. Sounds very nice for stereo and movies are even better.. Honestly, i never had a chance to hear what a good tweaked set-up feels like.. So all i do is compare it with my previous set-up and see if there is an improvement (just learning to measure responses)..
That's a lot of assuming there...with no concrete theory. I suggest you keep it simple. Really very simple.
Sure.. Thanks..
Dunno.
What I do know, for sure, is that with the type of subs that you are dealing, build such an enclosure and keeping it rock steady would be a challenge not worth accepting.
Ok.. The present ones, that i have suspended from ceiling, hardly vibrates when i watch thick action scenes (or) stereo with some deep bass.. So this made me think, what if i mount to false ceiling using that as enclosure itself..
Also, i have seen some images on AVS forums, where some have used the space above the room, besides the listening room as enclosure itself.. So thought, why not do it in a different way where most ceiling are unused at home (india)..
Kindly note that I am sharing my personal opinion and they could be biased towards the KIS (keep it simple, dummy) theory.
Good luck!
Regards,
Ravindra.
Thank you very much again for your detailed inputs.. Am yet undecided, evaluating the challenges in this task..