Hello phusis,
Your post brought up many good points and I believe most come down to your personal preferences being different from mine.
I think we both agree that the 4-sub distributed bass array (DBA) concept is something that works incredibly well in virtually any room and with any set of main speakers, even fast speakers such as planar-magnetic and electrostatic panels. I think this is bourn out by the fact that we both use them in our own systems.
All DBA systems will provide accurate, detailed, smooth and natural bass that has an effortless quality to it. But I consider the DBA concept to be an especially elegant bass system solution because of its scalability and flexibility that allows for customization based on personal preferences.
DBA's are scalable mainly by the choice of the 4 subs utilized. I use the relatively small subs standard with the AK Debra DBA system that have a 1 sq ft footprint, are about 2 feet tall and contain 10" drivers. Although this provides bass response in my room that's flat down to 20 Hz it's not quite able to reproduce the entire lowest octave of 16-32 Hz but this bass response has plenty of power, impact, extension and dynamics on music and ht for my preferences. Others who may have a preference for more bass power, impact, dynamics and sufficient bass extension to reproduce the entire lowest octave have the option to choose subs that are as powerful, extended, expensive and large as they prefer or can talk their spouses into.
DBA system's are flexible mainly by the choice of system settings such as the crossover frequency, whether the main speakers are run full-range or restricted and the overall bass system volume relative to the main speakers. I prefer setting the crossover as low as possible, typically in the 40-50 Hz range, because I run my main speakers full-range, they only have accurate bass extension down to 36 Hz, I find the bass sounds better integrated when the subs only engage when the content requires it and I perceive the bass as boosted overall when the crossover is set much higher.
You've stated you prefer setting your crossover at 80 Hz and using a high quality digital xover to restrict the bass output of your main speakers. This not only demonstrates the flexibility of DBA systems but allows other significant benefits as well that you detailed. I understand your point about perceiving the bass in your system as still natural and well integrated even at your much higher 80 Hz crossover. Perhaps it could be we just differ a bit in how we perceive moderately deep bass as it approaches frequencies that we're able to discern where the bass is coming from. But the DBA flexibility still applies since we're both just using the available DBA settings to attain the system performance and other benefits that we enjoy and prefer in our systems.
The overall DBA system volume relative to the volume of the main speakers volume is another important setting that allows significant flexibility. I prefer a bass system volume that is slightly less than half volume on the sub amp which allows the deep bass to be independently powerful, detailed and dynamic while still integrating well with the mid-range and treble of the main speakers as the overall volume level is varied from soft to loud.
But like you, I'm not adverse to increasing the relative bass system volume on certain Blu-ray movies or even some music. Just our personal preferences easily catered to by the flexibility of our DBA systems,right?
Tim
Your post brought up many good points and I believe most come down to your personal preferences being different from mine.
I think we both agree that the 4-sub distributed bass array (DBA) concept is something that works incredibly well in virtually any room and with any set of main speakers, even fast speakers such as planar-magnetic and electrostatic panels. I think this is bourn out by the fact that we both use them in our own systems.
All DBA systems will provide accurate, detailed, smooth and natural bass that has an effortless quality to it. But I consider the DBA concept to be an especially elegant bass system solution because of its scalability and flexibility that allows for customization based on personal preferences.
DBA's are scalable mainly by the choice of the 4 subs utilized. I use the relatively small subs standard with the AK Debra DBA system that have a 1 sq ft footprint, are about 2 feet tall and contain 10" drivers. Although this provides bass response in my room that's flat down to 20 Hz it's not quite able to reproduce the entire lowest octave of 16-32 Hz but this bass response has plenty of power, impact, extension and dynamics on music and ht for my preferences. Others who may have a preference for more bass power, impact, dynamics and sufficient bass extension to reproduce the entire lowest octave have the option to choose subs that are as powerful, extended, expensive and large as they prefer or can talk their spouses into.
DBA system's are flexible mainly by the choice of system settings such as the crossover frequency, whether the main speakers are run full-range or restricted and the overall bass system volume relative to the main speakers. I prefer setting the crossover as low as possible, typically in the 40-50 Hz range, because I run my main speakers full-range, they only have accurate bass extension down to 36 Hz, I find the bass sounds better integrated when the subs only engage when the content requires it and I perceive the bass as boosted overall when the crossover is set much higher.
You've stated you prefer setting your crossover at 80 Hz and using a high quality digital xover to restrict the bass output of your main speakers. This not only demonstrates the flexibility of DBA systems but allows other significant benefits as well that you detailed. I understand your point about perceiving the bass in your system as still natural and well integrated even at your much higher 80 Hz crossover. Perhaps it could be we just differ a bit in how we perceive moderately deep bass as it approaches frequencies that we're able to discern where the bass is coming from. But the DBA flexibility still applies since we're both just using the available DBA settings to attain the system performance and other benefits that we enjoy and prefer in our systems.
The overall DBA system volume relative to the volume of the main speakers volume is another important setting that allows significant flexibility. I prefer a bass system volume that is slightly less than half volume on the sub amp which allows the deep bass to be independently powerful, detailed and dynamic while still integrating well with the mid-range and treble of the main speakers as the overall volume level is varied from soft to loud.
But like you, I'm not adverse to increasing the relative bass system volume on certain Blu-ray movies or even some music. Just our personal preferences easily catered to by the flexibility of our DBA systems,right?
Tim