Big drivers in a big box. The bass drivers need to have a high cutoff. A big subwoofer with stand mounts can play 20hz-20khz but won't have slam. The surface area of the woofer is the key.
"Slam"--what is it, is it really accurate?
So, what mostly accounts for a system producing that "slam" you can feel in your chest? Is it that certain speakers are "voiced" with a mid-bass hump that causes it? Do they EQ the signal to produce it? Do they employ super powerful amps?
Secondly, how accurate is slam? How much of a goal in speaker selection should the ability to produce slam be?
The reason for the questions is that I am getting close to being in the market for new main speakers. My current amp is a McCormack DNA 1, BTW. Thanks for any info!
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Duke put it excellently into words: ”… It is a function of transient dynamics and raw SPL. If there's not much dynamic contrast, it doesn't come across as "slam". If there's good dynamic contrast but the sound pressure level is still soft, it doesn't come across as "slam". |
I guess when you talk about slam with main speakers you are referring to not only audible but also a physical sense of sound waves hitting you. In my experience the best slam means if I want to listen to drums or say fireworks that there can be a sensation of a sound wave passing you like it would be in real life. It hits you quickly and does not suffer from a buildup to reach peak levels as would happen with having to push a driver to hard to get there or having to much excursion required to get there. I am working on a two way system right now and it has two 12" woofers in the box. I have been a 15" woofer guy for a few years and now lean towards 12". I think the cone size being smaller delivers sound faster and with less cone flex and is therefor punchier and has better resolution. The efficiency on them is 99.5db and 400 watts each and as @phusis says when your speaker just loafs along to get the sound levels you want it does so with superb definition if all was picked and assembled right.
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