Umm ...
The electro-acoustical sum is what matters, and it's more than just what you remove, it's how the subwoofer integrates with the rest of the system.
This is why THX used a sealed 80 Hz limited satellite as the standard. Add 2nd order high pass filter, and voila, you have a total 24dB/octave roll off which would integrate nicely with a sub using a 4th order electrical low pass filter.
Honestly, only speaker makers and active room correction software does this anywhere near optimally, which is why I'm wary of recommending subs at all. It's not the tech is bad, it's the complications in the setup that I've so often heard as poor.
Best,
E
To OPTIMALLY separate the (low bass) subwoofer passband from the (mid-bass) main woofer passband, it's necessary to use a full 4th order (24dB/octave) active Linkwitz-Riley crossover.
The electro-acoustical sum is what matters, and it's more than just what you remove, it's how the subwoofer integrates with the rest of the system.
This is why THX used a sealed 80 Hz limited satellite as the standard. Add 2nd order high pass filter, and voila, you have a total 24dB/octave roll off which would integrate nicely with a sub using a 4th order electrical low pass filter.
Honestly, only speaker makers and active room correction software does this anywhere near optimally, which is why I'm wary of recommending subs at all. It's not the tech is bad, it's the complications in the setup that I've so often heard as poor.
Best,
E