sigh...
Just when I think I finally have my system dialed back in and tuned up something happens that leaves me once again frustrated.
Last night I decided to watch an old favorite of mine, "Fight Club" on blu-ray. *spoiler alert below caution* It's not a terribly action packed movie in terms of loud explosions, car chases and such and the Yamaha showed me I was processing the discs DTS-HD MA soundtrack. But there are a few scenes that throw a lot of LFE to the sub, particularly the explosion in Ed Norton's character's apartment, then again at the end when the buildings are detonated and brought down by Project Mayhem. Most of the film played very well, except those scenes in particular completely overwhelmed even my mighty SVS 12" ported sub. I had never before heard that sub actually bottom out and as long as I've had it now I didn't even think it was possible considering the work I've put it through. Nonetheless it happened and happened badly and I thought "well that's not good."
YPAO is set to manual EQ (copied from natural setting and tweaked to taste); levels are matched by YPAO and then double checked manually with my SPL meter at reference level. I do run the sub a few db hot but I've always done this and it never overworked the sub to the point of bottoming out. Just enough to add a bit more oomph to those types of scenes.
With the Yamaha RX-A2060 there is in fact an EQ curve for the sub but YPAO seems to do nothing to it below my crossover frequency of 80Hz. There's a big boost in the sub curve at around 130hz but it shouldn't have any effect as that frequency since that region is being directed back to my speakers right?
At any rate I have the ability to manually tweak sub level EQ but probably need to get an accurate measurement using REW and a calibrated mic. Would this be the recommended approach? Or is there anything else I can try?
A lot of other content seems much more balanced and no indication of bottoming out though with a few sources I've noticed it got rather close.