Hi tyray,
Sorry about detonating your gray matter, I hope it wasn't too painful. I think, if you just stuff the blown out bits back in your cranium, you should be fine.
Good bass response is harder to attain in most rooms than good mid-range and treble response.mainly because bass sound waves are extremely long (with deep bass sound waves often being longer than any dimension in your room) while mid-range and treble sound waves are much shorter and more directional.
Good mid-range and treble response can usually be attained at a specified listening position by properly positioning your main l+r main speakers and utilizing wall treatments at the first reflection points.
In my experience, a distributed bass array system is definitely the best method for optimizing bass response in a given room. Butt I believe it's still possible for you to get good bass response results in your room by using your single SVS sub as long as you only want to optimize the bass response at a single listening position.
This can be done using the following method:
1. Hookup your sub and place it at your desired listening position.
2. Play music that has good and repetitive bass.
3. Walk around your room in a systematic manner listening for an exact spot where the bass sounds the best to you.
4. Once this spot is located, reposition your sub to this exact spot.
5. To test results, sit at your designated listening position and repay the same music.
As you would expect, bass response will be improved as additional subs are added to the room. Of course, there's a practical limit to the acceptable number of subs in a room. Scientific experiments have consistently proven that measured in-room bass response only improves marginally beyond the use of 4 subs in a room.
This is the reason the Audio Kinesis Swarm system consists of 4 subs. You could start with your single SVS sub and add subs if you felt the need. I'd suggest following the positioning method I described above for each sub added.
Good luck,
Tim
Sorry about detonating your gray matter, I hope it wasn't too painful. I think, if you just stuff the blown out bits back in your cranium, you should be fine.
Good bass response is harder to attain in most rooms than good mid-range and treble response.mainly because bass sound waves are extremely long (with deep bass sound waves often being longer than any dimension in your room) while mid-range and treble sound waves are much shorter and more directional.
Good mid-range and treble response can usually be attained at a specified listening position by properly positioning your main l+r main speakers and utilizing wall treatments at the first reflection points.
In my experience, a distributed bass array system is definitely the best method for optimizing bass response in a given room. Butt I believe it's still possible for you to get good bass response results in your room by using your single SVS sub as long as you only want to optimize the bass response at a single listening position.
This can be done using the following method:
1. Hookup your sub and place it at your desired listening position.
2. Play music that has good and repetitive bass.
3. Walk around your room in a systematic manner listening for an exact spot where the bass sounds the best to you.
4. Once this spot is located, reposition your sub to this exact spot.
5. To test results, sit at your designated listening position and repay the same music.
As you would expect, bass response will be improved as additional subs are added to the room. Of course, there's a practical limit to the acceptable number of subs in a room. Scientific experiments have consistently proven that measured in-room bass response only improves marginally beyond the use of 4 subs in a room.
This is the reason the Audio Kinesis Swarm system consists of 4 subs. You could start with your single SVS sub and add subs if you felt the need. I'd suggest following the positioning method I described above for each sub added.
Good luck,
Tim