Bassbusters (trashcans) are designed for this issue, but IME bassbusters rapidly lose effectiveness as you drop below 80ish hz.
So, you can either:
1) Find an active low cut that you can live with for your main speakers (I use an NHT x-2 instead of the bare bones filter in the SMS1) and use the SMS1 to clean up the issue via subs. This is what I do.
or
2) Find satellite style main speakers that are intended for use with a subwoofer. These have little to no meaningful in-room bass response (and no compensating mid-bass hump) below 80-90hz. You can cross this type of speaker to a sub at a much higher in frequency without actively low-cutting it. (Sunfire Cinema Ribbon Monitors would be one example, I'm sure that there are others.) This way you can cross to your subs using only the subwoofer hi-cut function in the SMS1 and maintain a "pure" main signal path.
Good Luck
Marty
So, you can either:
1) Find an active low cut that you can live with for your main speakers (I use an NHT x-2 instead of the bare bones filter in the SMS1) and use the SMS1 to clean up the issue via subs. This is what I do.
or
2) Find satellite style main speakers that are intended for use with a subwoofer. These have little to no meaningful in-room bass response (and no compensating mid-bass hump) below 80-90hz. You can cross this type of speaker to a sub at a much higher in frequency without actively low-cutting it. (Sunfire Cinema Ribbon Monitors would be one example, I'm sure that there are others.) This way you can cross to your subs using only the subwoofer hi-cut function in the SMS1 and maintain a "pure" main signal path.
Good Luck
Marty