Mpw,
I still feel KEF disappointed me for 2 reasons.
It is rated at 120w and promises to go all the way down to 42Hz. It miserably failed in both the departments. So as a consumer I am not happy with the speakers. I am planning to take this up with KEF directly for giving misleading specs. I wouldn't have run Q300 to louder volume if they said it can't handle more power. I drove it with 105w/ch amp and it couldn't take it even with its rated 120w handling capacity.
I hope I am making sense.
Thanks
John.
Dear Mr. Anthony,
Good you found the source of the issue. almost all of us who push the envelope a little have at some point of time cooked a speaker or two. for most of us it happens early in our music journey so the impact is not too much. for you it is unfortunate.
now, for some unpalatable facts, if I may. your speakers are "cooked", if you are happy with the sound, good for you, but given the photos that you posted, I would be very surprised if they sounded as the manufacturer intended. the misshapen cone will not be structurally as sound, as most likely your sound will degenerate further by the very act of feeding dynamic music. high pass of 100hz is not the solution either, unless you have a super clean sub; the 50hz-100hz octave is better filled by the Kef, and if you wanted to high pass at 100hz, you could have purchased a smaller pair of speakers.
secondly as per claims of Kef - though I am no fanboy, Kef is not going to spoil their reputation by underspecing a popular design. I am sure that the specs are as on or off as any other manufacturer's. the problem is not power handling either i am sure in can handle 120w without a problem. the problem lies (and with most speakers) when feed low bass energy at high power. putting even 100w of bass will cause over excursion and much worse if you feed bass below the tuning frequency.
in fact it is a testament to kef quality that they are still playing acceptably. many other speakers would just jam solid when subjected to this abuse.
finally - my suggestion - get in touch with the dealer and try to get the drivers replaced. if not both then at least one and then you can swap the other for the centre channel.
you would have spent a decent amount on the kefs, make sure that you can really enjoy them.
as a postscript - like it has been written in earlier posts, pure direct is fine and even advisable for almost all music. but for Home theatre, always use the bass management and as a rule of thumb set the crossover at least 1/2 and octave above the Low frequency limit - i.e if you speaker is rated at 40hz, get the crossover for 60hz.
Edit i just saw the video - for 80dB spl the sub is moving too much. (i am assuming a 10 or 12"sub) it seems there is a lot of ultra low frequency content in your music. how did you measure and arrive at the 80dB spl number?