Svs, Rel, or ?.


I going to buy a pair of subs to use with my Dynaudio XD200 wireless speakers for music. 

 

I can put a sub by each speaker and want to keep the size down as much as possible. Medium sized room, the signal for the sub is from a Blusound Node. I’m not a bass head, but appreciate tight, tuneful bass. 

 

The Svs micro is interesting to me, but I’ve read favorable reviews for Rel through the years, especially for music. Unfortunately, there are no speaker outputs for the Rel, just the Node output. (I’m not sure how critical the speaker outputs are to the Rel’s ability to blend with main speakers.)
 

Svs micro vs Rel T5i, what are your opinions? 
 

Other compact sub recommendations are welcome.

 

Thanks!

uncledemp

Interesting. I use two SB-2000s and one SB-3000 in a semi-DBA setup and would like a fourth. They are passed low though, 50 and 45Hz respectively but blend well. I like the headroom.

I also have an older Britannia B1 and a Storm III. I love them all. The B1 used to be my only audio sub a year or two ago.

Had SVS 13ultra with the 1200D amp upgrade.  Phone app was nice.  Needed to adjust.  Got Rythmik and SVS is up for sale as we speak.  No comparison.  The servo tech is amazing. The adjustments to fit most rooms.  I was looking at two Rel 812/s but after demo at friends I was confident this would be the one and I was right. Go Rythmik. They will actually answer the phone and be helpful. Give them a ring. 

Check out HSU research. They have excellent subs which rival REL at half the price. 

The Rythmik subs are fantastic. The Hsu subs are probably the best value out on the market. I own both so I am slightly biased. I have also owned SVS and Martin Logan, but I will continue to stay with Rythmik or Hsu. 

I will recommend SVS SB 2000 (non-Pro version) which outputs 500w RMS into 4 ohm and can go down to 19Hz within 3dB. The non-Pro version allows you to do line-level connection with High Pass Filter (fixed at 80 Hz 12 dB/octave slope) loop back to power amp, leaving head room for your power amp to better handle high/midrange frequency. I found that is the best way to integrate subwoofer with the main speakers.  Initially, I was torn between Rel Tx5 and SVS (for similar pricing) but, considering Tx5 is the 8" driver and can only get down to 32Hz within 6dB plus downfiring that I am not fond of, I decide to go with SVS.  Remember some music does go down to around 25 Hz.  If you decide to go with Rel, save money for bigger model such as T9.  Both manufactures have free trial policy you might want to take advantage (but not abuse) of it.