Ahh, thanks for that. Can you tell I've only stared reading and thinking about any of this a week ago? hahaha. Happy to be corrected. Keep it coming
The only thought that went in prior is running my own calcs to determine room dimensions to minimise standing waves at expected angles... Only to find out that all that's been done before and I could have borrowed someone else's hard work to get my numbers. It was a fun exercise anyway!
So, where's all this I hear about "Denon and Maratz are practically the same except Denon is better for movies because it's warmer / more bass heavy, and Maratz is better for music". It's everywhere on the internet!
Yeah, a quick search on them revealed LOTS of advertising without actual numbers listed in specs, and then forums saying they're all talk and no show compared to a lot of the competition, especially in the last few years.
The 1205 seems to still be quite popular though.
I only need "just fine" for music. I don't listen to Jazz. Maybe I'll start? but then as my preferences evolve, so will my setup. Gotta start with where I'm at now!
Are you able to give me at least your understanding of ported vs not ported subs? Again, only a week's worth of knowledge, and I'm sitting here going "OK, seems all good speakers that aren't crappy PC quality are ported. That makes sense, air needs to move. Blocking air from moving means drivers can't actuate, so it stifles sound. Certain frequencies Might make it out like higher ones because they are fast moving, and quickly put back in neutral 'undriven' position by air pressure inside. Lower frequencies have a harder time moving the driver enough because less speed = less inertia so they struggle fighting the air pressure".
That's what my engineer brain that has to come up for a reason for everything I see - came up with. And it makes sense to me.
Backed up by all the PC speaker surround kits I've seen and soundbar+sub combos having ported subs, they need it.
And now, unported subs (specifically for low frequencies)? Wha? I didn't even NOTICE it wasn't ported until pointed out here, I didn't consider a sub could function if airflow wasn't allowed.