I am going to have some nice DIY towers.. these to be exact:
http://www.geocities.com/cc00541/Statements.html
The man that designed these towers says that these towers produce bass from say 40hz to 80hz better than any sub made. I have a great sub... the kappa perfect sub everyone here knows so well. Is there any truth to this? Should I run the towers from 40hz and up and let the sub do 40hz and below or should I just stick with the usual 80hz? Thanks in advance to anyone who can clear this up!
Sorry, but this is more nonsense. A subwoofer, if properly designed and built, will produce mid-bass as good as any woofer. This also presumes the sub driver has low enough inductance to respond to the bandwidth of relevance(which most do) discussed here. The Kappa Perfect design, if you built it exactly to avaserfi's instructions and used the internal acoustic dampening that he specified; it will respond perfectly/transparently up to about 100-105Hz. Of course, to get perfect midbass, you would need two of these subs: one to place near each main channel. The wavelength of this higher bass range is too short to depend on a single sub-woober crossed over at 100Hz in a room. This will cause issues.
My studio monitor system uses Kappa Perfect 10" drivers for the woofers (up to 105Hz crossover point to the mid-bass drivers) and it produces absolute transparent sound across the entire spectrum. It is a reference level monitor system that can easily exceed almost anything at any price for the purposes of neutral monopole near field monitoring. If I had any valid reason to suspect any type of deficiency I would not use the sub drivers up to this frequency.
Subs don't sound that good crossed at 80-100Hz for music ONLY when a single unit is used instead of at least a pair(to deal with the wavelength issue mentioned above) or when the subwoofer is not designed properly to transparently reproduce the upper bass range. This problem may extend to a large number of subs I suppose, as hardly any even use the proper internal acoustic absorption, which is critical when you have a medium to large size cabinet. On top of that, very few people use proper sub pairs, and even fewer use the proper active crossover system that can be adjusted for ideal integration.
-Chris