Lightminer,
Are you using your system for HT as well as music? Are you a pipe organ guy? If not, why worry about ultimate LF below 25hz. In my collection of >5,000 records and cds, I can only think of a few that go below 30hz. I only mention this because there are tradeoffs in choosing subs and the first one I'll give away is extension.
BTW, I can't imagine that you'll miss the difference in bass performance between EQ'd subs w/ your 3.6s and full range 3.6s. Both will "go there", but they'll sound quite different in terms of "impact". I personally have little issue with timbre (my subs are actively crossed at 74hz). I assume that this is because timbre becomes less meaningful as you descend in frequency. At 25hz, you feel it more than you hear it. I may be less sensitive to timbre issues higher in hz near the x-over than some other folks, but I don't hear the timbre change im my set up; even in the lower registers of electric bass or piano where fundamentals may fall in this critical area. However, this is a classic YMMV.
AVTalk.com and Hometheatershack.com are the two subwoofer distortion & group delay databases I know of (Thanks Shadorne and Bob Reynolds). None of the data you seek is on either site, but there are several REL model test results vailable. General rule for REL = great group delay #s, ugly distortion #s. SVS subs seem to offer a nearly unmatched balance of distortion & group delay performance (if you value both equally), and they do so at a comparatively low price.
Marty
Are you using your system for HT as well as music? Are you a pipe organ guy? If not, why worry about ultimate LF below 25hz. In my collection of >5,000 records and cds, I can only think of a few that go below 30hz. I only mention this because there are tradeoffs in choosing subs and the first one I'll give away is extension.
BTW, I can't imagine that you'll miss the difference in bass performance between EQ'd subs w/ your 3.6s and full range 3.6s. Both will "go there", but they'll sound quite different in terms of "impact". I personally have little issue with timbre (my subs are actively crossed at 74hz). I assume that this is because timbre becomes less meaningful as you descend in frequency. At 25hz, you feel it more than you hear it. I may be less sensitive to timbre issues higher in hz near the x-over than some other folks, but I don't hear the timbre change im my set up; even in the lower registers of electric bass or piano where fundamentals may fall in this critical area. However, this is a classic YMMV.
AVTalk.com and Hometheatershack.com are the two subwoofer distortion & group delay databases I know of (Thanks Shadorne and Bob Reynolds). None of the data you seek is on either site, but there are several REL model test results vailable. General rule for REL = great group delay #s, ugly distortion #s. SVS subs seem to offer a nearly unmatched balance of distortion & group delay performance (if you value both equally), and they do so at a comparatively low price.
Marty