I'd like to buy a high-end subwoofer but am stuck between buying on line and possibly getting stuck with something I don't like, and paying what seems like an extra $1k to a 'brick&mortar' store that will let me audition at least some of the units I'm looking at.
Here's where I'm at:
Fronts: B&W 803d powered by Levinson 334
Rears: B&W 805s powered by Adcom 7000
Center: B&W HTM2d powered by Adcom 7000
Sub: cheapo Polk
It's used 70% for music (just the fronts) and 30% for video content as a 5.1 system. Room is 16' x 24' with a complex high ceiling. I went to considerable trouble with acoustic treatments and eq. software to remove any deep spectral nulls.
I understand the 'logical' sub for this setup is the B&W 825 or 855, but I've been also looking at JL 112/113, Velodyne DD 15/18, and now SVS SB13. I'm worried about buying one 'sight unseen'. I believe I'd want a sealed unit since I'd like reproduction accuracy more than special effects and 'boominess'.
There are two local high-end dealers, one of whom stocks Velodyne and B&W, and the other JL Audio and B&W. I'd love to go audition, but their prices are about $1k more than what I see online, and I don't want to 'jerk them around' auditioning and then go buy online.
How should I approach this?
1)er...what exactly makes a sealed box accurate and a ported box "special effects and boomy"? Seriously, since you're looking for high end sub performance what I recommend is a large ported sub that can extend +/- 3db low into 14-16hz. The advantage to extending low means that musical frequencies down to 27hz or so will experience a more flat response curve which will mean it's more "accurate". Of course it also needs low group delay for tightness, and an amplifier with a respectable damping factor to control it. - it's not just special effects to have sub sonics, it's increasing the sub's effective frequency response range and in effect making it a more accurate reproducer of recordings in higher freqeuncies (well, if you call 27-45hz or so a high frequency LOL). I just posted this two of three days ago and while i hate to regurgitate the same thing IMO it seems relevent to this thread as well: which of the following frequency response curves seems like it most accurately reproduces music?
the green, is a large ported sub. the red is large and sealed... the blue is a smaller, higher ported design and the pink is a smaller sealed design. All of the above are just theoreticals in an anechoic environment and of course room gain gives you a different response curve but it's better to EQ down (remove peaks at a given power level) than to have to EQ up (take away amplifier headroom). Basically what you want should be
- Multiples - either 2 or 4 in order to even out in-room response
- A quality high excursion driver that can dig low but still sing high up to ~90hz.
- A larger enclosure - unless you've got like a 21" driver with a top notch design, bigger really is better.
- Very careful attention to placement. a very good sub can sound boomy in the wrong position
- an effective EQ - consider alternatives to the popular ones; as some of them like the velodyne are seemingly rather inaccurate.
I'm a believer that you can't beat DIY when it comes to subs because of how much control you have and how great modern software simulations are - the problem with ready-made subs is that they're usually smaller than ideal because it's just not economical to make a sub that's too big and then ship it... If I were buying a sub from a company though, the ones I'd look into would all be online.. let's assume a rough budget of 4-5000? I hope that's not too high.
A pair of Seaton Submersives (sealed)
A pair of Elemental Designs A7 - 900 (vented)
4 x of Rythmik FV15HP (vented) or F25 (sealed)
A pair of SVS PC-13U (Vented)
4 x JTR Captivator with a pair of fan-modded EP2500s powering it
4 x HSU ULS 15 (their quad drive package)
maybe even try emailing those companies and requesting some near field response curves just to see what kind of performance you're gonna be looking at.
If you did have to go brick and mortar, definitely consider the Velodyne DD18 for its servo, or a JL Fathom or a pair of RBH 1010-SEP/R. Again, one sub at that price range probably won't be as clean as two or especially four for the same total value and especially not if you're factoring in iD brands' flagships. DOn't be afraid of them, most of these companies have 30 day return policies if you ultimately find it didn't knock your socks off. All the ones i recommended are great subs, period. Definitely consider the eDs and Rhythmik venteds IMO... give those companies a call and ask them if they consider their flagship vented subs as musical as their flagship sealed subs.
Of course, if you're willing to go DIY, with $4-5k you could easily makea pair of totally monstrous subs that will be musical, powerful, accurate, and effortless. BTW, on that note, i recently emailed a cabinet maker for a quote to do that part for me and he wanted 1800 dollars and said it was because of the piano hi-gloss finish i requested... i didn't even spend 1000 on the driver/amp and the MDF probably costs ~200 at most...so on that note - you're probably paying mostly for the finishing labour with a lot of boutique B&M subs, not to mention all those other overheads like dealership markup. Is the finish 150% more important than the performance?