Large speakers plus EQ, what have you done?


Hi Everyone,

I’m hoping to collect experiences from those who have:

1. Large (floor standers) with genuinely deep bass

2. Have EQ’d the speakers, at least through the bass section.

There are many ways to get excellent bass, but please keep OTHER methods off this discussion.  If you use a subwoofer, or bass array, or whatever, this discussion is not about that. I know I’ve recommended some of those ideas myself. I just genuinely want to know who has tried this particular combination and what their experience has been.

This is also not a discussion about what I’m going to buy. Just curious who has done this and how far they feel it got them in terms of integrating the speakers with the room.

Were you satisfied?  Did you end up giving up and doing something else?

 

Thanks!

 

Erik

erik_squires

Also, it seems, since so many discussions about improving bass usually end up being battle royals about the various ways to apply subwoofers I wanted to see how well users who did not use subwoofers at all do, without having the other, tired arguments about subs.

I wanted to approach the question of getting excellent bass with a fresh approach, making for an interesting thread I hope.

I've been very pleased with the DSP that is integrated into my Weiss DAC.  That plus REW gives me all the control I need - for now anyway.  :)

@hk_fan - Kind of why I like Roon, which has become my only real music source. It has a very flexible and capable digital EQ section.

I’ve had awesome results with my new Danville dspNexus with newly released SHARC processor playing 8 channels with 12 biquads per channel. I have 20.1 Magnepan speakers running full range (no passive crossovers except the internal tweeter) and four subwoofers, two towers up front with five 10” Seas subwoofers in each, wired parallel with sealed enclosures, and two 16” SVS SB-16 Ultras in the room. The biquads are IIR filters to reduce processing stress, they round to 10 decimal places so they are extremely accurate. 

I measure each speaker independently at the listening position with an Earthworks 30Hz-30KHz with Room EQ Wizard and put the results into Multi Sub Optimizer. I let all speakers play full range. I then hook up my fast computer and let it chug for a few hours to make the best room correction adjusting for time alignment, phase, and amplitude. I then take those results and plug the numbers into my DSP. The sound is the best I’ve heard. I listen to music and movies at loud volumes and the neighbors have never complained because the sound is so well controlled through the DSP and multiple subwoofers.

I think this is the best way to get accurate sound but I know that the barrier into technology could be intimidating. One has to be careful with active amplification not to cross wire speakers and blow them out. I recently tweaked the dB levels between the front and rear subs by 3dB to add a little more low end oomph and love the results.

I think this is a great topic! Thanks for putting it out there. I wish it was present when I started trying to learn about active amplification and DSP.