I don't understand what all you guys are saying. TLS Guy, you said the all decent subs (like hsu and svs im assuming) are going to act the the velodyne did. If that is the case then I don't understand how you guys think that is high quality sound. When I heard the velodyne subs, whenever the bass drum was kicking, there was an over whelming sound of *** which over powered the rest of the speakers. The bass was flabby and very out of control and i did not like it at all.
Also I don't understand what you said by "the Monster's were impressing you exactly because they were not good subs". I don't see how that makes sense. If you were to blind fold me and play music from the velodyne and the monster, I would still go after the monster. Im sure that monster is over pricing those subwoofers a lot, and thats why I ask you guys to give me an alternative, but in my opinion the smoothness of the bass blew the velodyne away.
TLS guy, are you a fan of the dls series from velodyne or are they just an ok subwoofer company? Honestly in my opinion those subwoofers were unrealistic and isnt that what we all are going for? Doesn't hi-fi mean accurate reproduction exactly how they were created? If that is correct, the monster had a more accurate reproduction of music than the velodyne did.
Just some thoughts. What are all yours?
Actually I'm not a fan of any subwoofer. Look at my rig and you won't see one.
Now good subs are deigned to splice to speakers and extend their range below 60 to 80 Hz. They are not designed to plug a whole created by someone designing a speaker with a passive crossover at 120 Hz. In fact if you look on the Monster site, they variously describe those units as subs and bass modules. Now subs should not be designed to fill in at 120 Hz. I don't know what more I can do to make you understand this. So all good subs will do what you don't want. But paradoxically a device operating out of band, and I have to assume a poor response in the sub band, happens to plug the whole in the response of the speakers you are using them with. I have to say that those subs would almost certainly sound awful coupled with competently designed speakers.
Now I know exactly what sort of sound you are after. I have built and designed speaker systems for guitar players like yourself previously.
Back in the seventies JBL and Altec Lansing, made 15 inch drivers that when crossed over to suitable HF units, at around 400 to 500 Hz, with passive or preferably electronic crossover, would produce just the sound you want.
In the town I lived almost 40 years ago, I built a huge system in a big hall. It had 15 inch JBLs in enormous back loaded horns, with 33 inch horn mouths. These were built into the side of the stage. The tops were 8 high quality units as a line source with aperiodic damping. The stage monitors were Altec Lansing 15 inch coaxials reflex loaded screened off from the mains.
The sound covered the whole hall evenly. The live bands loved the sound, and asked me to build speakers for home use, not instrument speakers.
They were built around the 15 inch Altec Lansing 811-A. The design was a low Qt sealed design. I just parted out the last cabinets recently, for lack of space. The Altecs will be for sale on eBay when I get round to it, and I bet a lot of experienced builders will be after them like flies to the Honey pot. I still have the top heads, as they don't take much space. Those speakers produced just the sound people like yourself are after.