You know the answer: which sub matters far less than how many. They can be upfiring, downfiring, tubes laying sideways firing or mounted up on the wall ceiling firing. Just as long as there's four firing. Then your 20-ish range will no longer be very rare, but consistent and true to the recording.
Subwoofers - Front Firing or Down Firing - Which Sounds Best?
Any advantage to woofer cone facing toward listener as opposed to firing down to the floor? Thinking of upgrading my 20 year old B&W ASW-650 sub to get that oh-so-pleasing belly message which lives in the 20-ish Hz range (very rare I know). SVS has the "tube" subwoofer (PC-2000) at a reasonable price. Just wondering if the floor-firing model would disappoint? Wouldn't want the hassle of returning if it did. Any opinions? Current users? Thanks.
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- 51 posts total
The sub that is best integrated into the room. Room acoustics, configuration, EQ and placement all matter more than the type of box (sealed vs. ported). Here are my thoughts: https://speakermakersjourney.blogspot.com/2020/04/how-to-not-buy-subwoofer.html |
In my experience down-firing is less likely to excite room nodes. I assume because they essentially fire in four different directions rather than one. I would speculate that in a perfect room, front-firing would be best because you could line it up perfectly with the mains and have a perfectly in-phase wave launch. In practice I imagine down-firing is better in a lot of rooms. |
- 51 posts total