In my opinion (gotta qualify here) you have nothing to lose and everything to gain. As long as it (or they in my case) is properly integrated it can be a wonderful addition. My JL Audio subs won't work the way you're going to do it but if you're missing bass you can complete your sound if you pull it off with the right sub(s). When it is done right you never know a sub is present but the bass isn't missing when it should be there. My subs get the full range signal and my NAD M3 integrated can send either a full range signal or use the built-in bass management feature to limit the bass signal sent to the mains if I choose. Works like a charm.
Adding a sub - what will I loose?
It seems that adding another piece of equipment to the audio chain would degrade the sound quality to the main speakers (air, immediacy, the mid range, etc). Or am I way off here??
Currently have a preamp with no sub-out and low output tube amp. Plan to use line level to the sub and then out to the amp. That way speakers would not play full range (above 80hz).
Currently have a preamp with no sub-out and low output tube amp. Plan to use line level to the sub and then out to the amp. That way speakers would not play full range (above 80hz).
- ...
- 30 posts total
- 30 posts total