There's a lot more bass in a 6.5" driver than most of you think


One topic of discussion I often see new audiophiles touch on is whether to get larger speakers for more bass.

I usually suggest they tune the room first, then re-evaluate. This is based on listening and measurement in several apartments I’ve lived in. Bigger speakers can be nothing but trouble if the room is not ready.


In particular, I often claim that the right room treatment can make smaller speakers behave much larger. So, to back up my claims I’d like to submit to you my recent blog post here:

https://speakermakersjourney.blogspot.com/2020/01/the-snr-1-room-response-and-roon.html


Look at the bass response from those little drivers! :)


I admit for a lot of listeners these speakers won’t seem as punchy as you might like, but for an apartment dweller who does 50/50 music and theater they are ideal for me. If you’d like punchy, talk to Fritz who aligns his drivers with more oomf in the bass.


erik_squires
It's the flat earth perspective Erik, no-one thinking properly could possibly be as obnoxious or noisome so consistently.
I have found that the reason to use an active sub is not primarily to extend the bass frequencies, but because it adds greater transparency to the overall sound. I also find that it enhances the quality of the bass, and so it also helps with floor standing speakers that reach down adequately on their own. Why is this? I have no idea, but I heard confirmation of this from more experienced audiophiles. Perhaps it's because the active sub provides a sort of "bi-amping" for the lowest frequencies. 
The bass response is impacted by a bunch of factors, driver design, cabinet design, listening environment volume, and a whole slew of other things.
My preference is a smaller driver since there typically isn't as much mass.  I typically get good results in my environment with 10 inch drivers.
But a 6 1/2 woofer is capable of playing 30hz in a small environment like a car.

There's no replacement for displacement.

You can get some very good low end with small drivers in a transmission line enclosure.  But you can't get level and transient response.   Can't do it.  

Which is why you want sub-woofers.  And not just one or two.  Each sub creates standing waves in a room.  So the frequency response is uneven throughout the room.  So what you want to do is to have multiple subs, so that their respective standing waves even things out in the room.   I have three subs for that reason.

If you want more level, you need bigger drivers.  If you don't need higher levels, you can get away with smaller drivers.  My subs have 10" drivers for instance, but with three of them, it meets my needs.
I have two sets of speakers with 2 pairs of six inch drivers.  They are great, but in my current listening room, my 25 x 30 living room with high ceilings,  subs are a must on much music. One pair is duplicated in my 12 x 12 bedroom with no subs needed, even without tone controls. I have actually considered using a big sub cabinet wired for stereo sets of 6.5 inch drivers, maybe 3 or 4 per channel, depending on the leftover crossovers I am still playing with.