Hi Rooze,
Rather than challenge other's assertions I will describe what has worked well for me in my room(s) and cars with various subwoofers over the years for getting the best integration.
It really starts with the subwoofer- design, performance and controls.
I have had the best results with sealed subwoofers that are designed to be corner loaded to yield their flattest response. A sub that is easier to integrate will have a wide flat response when positioned properly.
My last in home subwoofers were JL audio and they are sealed design with a very flat useable response. These two aspects make them more musical rather than having peaks in the response that prevent them from disappearing.
With a sealed design and a flat response the next thing is a continuously variable phase control- 0 to 360 on the dial. This is a requirement- more later. I have never been able to satisfactorily integrate a subwoofer that only had a 0-180 deg. switch.
When you have these fundamentals I had no need for DSP or room correction of any kind. I have tuned subs with these assumptions with DSP and switching on the correction did not improve the sound.
Tuning- get an app or RTA software and a microphone for a laptop for example. Get a CD with full spectrum pink noise (the sheffield labs "my disk" for example.
Now play the pink noise through your speakers (no subs) at moderate / high volume and measure their response from you listening seat.
Note the frequency where the bass response drops off and is ~ 3db less than the midrange frequencies- e.g. 65 Hz.
Place your subs at the room positions where they sound the best and most even at your spot.
Turn on one sub at first and set the crossover for your measured frequency- e.g. 65hz.
Turn the sub up higher than normal and take a system measurement with the pink noise track again.
Look for the behavior at the crossover- peaks and valleys. Back off on the crossover until you see a "valley" in the response, then slowly bring it back up again until the response is smooth.
Then adjust the level until that is smooth.
Here comes the fun part and the secret sauce for perfect integration.
Play some music (loudly) with extended bass beats. I use gnarls barkley "gone daddy gone" or new order "blue monday"
Set the continuous phase to "0" and listen, take notes about the bass beats- tight, blurry, weak? etc. now rotate the phase dial ~ 45 degrees, sit back and take more notes. listen to where the bass is clearest and tightest. You are trying to "time" the sub to your main speaker at the crossover frequency. Once your notes say you have the best position - e.g. -45 degrees, from there rotate it 1/16 turn in either direction and see if it can sound any better.
Once you have it dialed in the sub and mains are in perfect sync at the crossover frequency. bass will be tight and powerful and there will be no muffling or cancelling. It will sound impactful without effort. Take note and log of all the settings.
Now add in the second sub - you are now going to integrate the second sub into your "integrated system". Repeat the same procedures changing only the settings on the second sub.
Practice, be patient, take notes and have fun! Once you nail this you will have the best sounding subs you can have !
Rather than challenge other's assertions I will describe what has worked well for me in my room(s) and cars with various subwoofers over the years for getting the best integration.
It really starts with the subwoofer- design, performance and controls.
I have had the best results with sealed subwoofers that are designed to be corner loaded to yield their flattest response. A sub that is easier to integrate will have a wide flat response when positioned properly.
My last in home subwoofers were JL audio and they are sealed design with a very flat useable response. These two aspects make them more musical rather than having peaks in the response that prevent them from disappearing.
With a sealed design and a flat response the next thing is a continuously variable phase control- 0 to 360 on the dial. This is a requirement- more later. I have never been able to satisfactorily integrate a subwoofer that only had a 0-180 deg. switch.
When you have these fundamentals I had no need for DSP or room correction of any kind. I have tuned subs with these assumptions with DSP and switching on the correction did not improve the sound.
Tuning- get an app or RTA software and a microphone for a laptop for example. Get a CD with full spectrum pink noise (the sheffield labs "my disk" for example.
Now play the pink noise through your speakers (no subs) at moderate / high volume and measure their response from you listening seat.
Note the frequency where the bass response drops off and is ~ 3db less than the midrange frequencies- e.g. 65 Hz.
Place your subs at the room positions where they sound the best and most even at your spot.
Turn on one sub at first and set the crossover for your measured frequency- e.g. 65hz.
Turn the sub up higher than normal and take a system measurement with the pink noise track again.
Look for the behavior at the crossover- peaks and valleys. Back off on the crossover until you see a "valley" in the response, then slowly bring it back up again until the response is smooth.
Then adjust the level until that is smooth.
Here comes the fun part and the secret sauce for perfect integration.
Play some music (loudly) with extended bass beats. I use gnarls barkley "gone daddy gone" or new order "blue monday"
Set the continuous phase to "0" and listen, take notes about the bass beats- tight, blurry, weak? etc. now rotate the phase dial ~ 45 degrees, sit back and take more notes. listen to where the bass is clearest and tightest. You are trying to "time" the sub to your main speaker at the crossover frequency. Once your notes say you have the best position - e.g. -45 degrees, from there rotate it 1/16 turn in either direction and see if it can sound any better.
Once you have it dialed in the sub and mains are in perfect sync at the crossover frequency. bass will be tight and powerful and there will be no muffling or cancelling. It will sound impactful without effort. Take note and log of all the settings.
Now add in the second sub - you are now going to integrate the second sub into your "integrated system". Repeat the same procedures changing only the settings on the second sub.
Practice, be patient, take notes and have fun! Once you nail this you will have the best sounding subs you can have !