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TLS Guy
Audioholic Jedi
Actually most pipe organs do not go as low as people think. The largest stop on most organs is the 16 ft stop, with frequencies as low as 35 Hz. Only very large organs have 32 ft stops, frequencies down to 17 Hz. Even then these stops are seldom called on. 64 ft stops are very unusual.It would suffice if the subs went down to 30 Hz unless you listen to music like a Pipe Organ or this techno stuff
An interesting note on the piano
This makes the piano sound better to most ears, partially because the low end of the piano at 27.5 Hz is in a frequency range where your hearing has dropped off considerably, so that the upper harmonics of these low strings are probably heard more prominently than the fundamental. The extreme upper end of the piano is tuned up to 30 cents sharp in a practice that is called "stretched" tuning.
from this website
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/music/pianof.html
The foundation stops of the organ are the 4 and 8 ft diapasons, with frequencies in the 150 Hz and 75 Hz range respectively. What the organ does have is a huge mid and HF sound energy.
Speakers that reproduce organ in addition to a good bass response, need very good output above 70 Hz. The foundation stops between 75 and 150 Hz find a lot of speakers very weak in the wind so to speak.
I just caught the end of the AGO convention in the twin cities and had the pleasure of hearing Stephen Cleobury's recital of British organ music on the huge Casavant organ at Central Lutheran Minneapolis.
The bass is largely under pining and punctuation. The HF energy is what is so huge compared with other instruments.
It was a wonderful recital and you could smell the Malvern Hills in Elgar's first organ sonata.