Hi Bob#1, Keep us informed. Many times, people report a increased clarity to the music, as a result of removing unwanted cone movement (equals noise, wasted power from you amp and loss of control of the driver). And your amp will be happier.
You appear to have only one sub, so you are in mono at your crossover point. That would be your "rumble filter".
You now need to try a 20hz filter for the subsonics.
Albert had kindly offered to speak to me over the phone regarding this issue, but I think we should keep it in this thread so everyone can benefit. Albert if you have any suggestions or comments please post them here.
Bob#1, you are probably limiting your system if this is a problem in your system. It needs to be eliminated for your system to shine (if it is disturbing/loud enough). How you do it is up to you. Whether you can find a mechanical solution, adding a filter or roll off of your speakers low freq extension. All of these have benefit in not hearing rumble or subsonics. If you can live with a little "rumble" that is an option that is up to you.
My guess is it is not rumble (since you have a mono sub, OR it may be rumble that is above your crossover point!) so it is probably subsonics ie: below 20hz. And filters work very well for this.
You never did mention when you have this problem, is it at certain volume levels, LPs with low bass, certain records that otherwise appear quiet?
Of course there is one other problem that is not system related which I mentiond above, which is rumble pressed into the record. Some of this rumble can even be above 100hz. This you just have to live with, knowing that it is in the lp and not your system. But even this can be eliminated, with a filter. The problem with this is that you want to keep it stereo down to as low as you can. I think this means stereo down to at least 50hz or better yet 40hz. And these freq will do a very good job of elimininating most rumble.
Bob#2
We are not men , we are Devo
You appear to have only one sub, so you are in mono at your crossover point. That would be your "rumble filter".
You now need to try a 20hz filter for the subsonics.
Albert had kindly offered to speak to me over the phone regarding this issue, but I think we should keep it in this thread so everyone can benefit. Albert if you have any suggestions or comments please post them here.
Bob#1, you are probably limiting your system if this is a problem in your system. It needs to be eliminated for your system to shine (if it is disturbing/loud enough). How you do it is up to you. Whether you can find a mechanical solution, adding a filter or roll off of your speakers low freq extension. All of these have benefit in not hearing rumble or subsonics. If you can live with a little "rumble" that is an option that is up to you.
My guess is it is not rumble (since you have a mono sub, OR it may be rumble that is above your crossover point!) so it is probably subsonics ie: below 20hz. And filters work very well for this.
You never did mention when you have this problem, is it at certain volume levels, LPs with low bass, certain records that otherwise appear quiet?
Of course there is one other problem that is not system related which I mentiond above, which is rumble pressed into the record. Some of this rumble can even be above 100hz. This you just have to live with, knowing that it is in the lp and not your system. But even this can be eliminated, with a filter. The problem with this is that you want to keep it stereo down to as low as you can. I think this means stereo down to at least 50hz or better yet 40hz. And these freq will do a very good job of elimininating most rumble.
Bob#2
We are not men , we are Devo