To clarify:
This is a small bedroom setup. The room is 12x11x8, the system is oriented along the length dimension, the seats are about a foot off the back wall.
There is a closet that is semi open with sliding doors at the front left side of the room. This is a no go placement area because for whatever reason the closet causes a loss of anything below 40hz.
The two practical options for the sub is either the front right corner, which results in a 10dB peak at 50hz, or the rear right corner, which results in a 6dB peak at 50hz. I chose the front right corner because it offers a completely even response throughout the back of the room can the rear corner. It may be peaky, but it is consistently peaky everywhere lol.
The thinking behind bass trap treatments has to do with the fact it seems Audyssey has a harder time correcting the response in this room vs my larger living room, which is significantly less problematic. Here is the latest calibration results
I don’t think eq is incapable of fixing the issue, just that Audyssey is having a harder time sorting out what is a room problem that can be corrected and what isn’t because the peaks are so extreme.
Using manual parametric EQ via equalizer apo on my pc, on my front l/r speakers (no sub), I managed to achieve almost perfectly flat bass as you can see here
I will have to upload an uncorrected graph tomorrow morning, but it really boils down to nothing more than a giant 10dB peak centered at 50hz that’s about 12dB/octave wide.
So far, I have come up with a few possible solutions, I guess what I’m asking is which would be most effective while still being practical from a cost and space standpoint.
Option one:
Using a minidsp on the subwoofer to flatten the worst peaks, leaving Audyssey with less work to do and theoretically achieving better results post calibration.
Option two would be minidsps on all 7 speaker and the sub, however, that can get very costly with all the necessary external amplification.
Option three I’ve considered is similar to what
@gene mentioned, multiple subs to give a perfectly even response, with a high (120hz) xover and minidsps on the subs only. The issue I am running into with this is finding a sub that is both small enough to use in multiple locations considering the limited space, while also achieving an f3 of at least 25hz.
The subwoofer currently in use is a Dayton sub 1500, which, as you can see from the above measurements, extends to 22hz -3dB and still has useful output
@19Hz -6dB. The only 10” sub I’ve found so far that can achieve a decent response below 30hz is the svs pb 1000, which is too large due to the cabinet size. Most smaller subs roll of below 30hz, which seems pointless imo considering my front speakers can achieve decent output at 30hz in room with minimal distortion without the help of a sub.
If I went the multiple sub route, considering the room size, would something like 2-3 Dayton 10” ultimax subs eq’ed via a linkwitz transform to 20hz give enough output, or would it be pushing the drivers too hard? As I previously said, I will upload some more graphs and a diagram later, but with room gain I get 10dB @50hz, 5dB @25hz, and 3dB
@20Hz.