Hi Ed,
I understand that DSP latency and group delay are different, but unless I'm misunderstanding what I'm looking at in Ricci's spectrograms, group delay is literally a measure of the (frequency dependent) delay of a subwoofer's output. In the OPs case, he won't be able to correct for that 8 feet, so the question is how big of an impact would that have. It seems like it would be akin to adding 8ms across the entirety of the GD curve of a subwoofer, which can obviously have negative consequences in some (probably a lot) of cases. Please correct me if that impression is mistaken.
Hi Steve -
DSP latency and actual acoustic distance can be compensated for by the AVR subwoofer distance setting.
There is no way to compensate/correct for the group delay profile of a given subwoofer - it is an inherent function of the electro/acoustic design of the subwoofer. Nor would I be concerned about this.
A variable tune subwoofer like the SVS PB13U might help you understand this. Take a look at the GD profile for this subwoofer in all three tunes (20 Hz reflex, 16 Hz reflex, and Sealed).
SVS PB13-Ultra Subwoofer Measurements and Analysis — Reviews and News from Audioholics
While the three GD curves obviously differ at the deepest bass frequencies (which is perfectly normal and expected), notice how they are all virtually identical overlays > 28 Hz.
Were you to set-up a PB13U and an AS-EQ1 in a system with an auto-set-up AVR, it would set virtually the same overall subwoofer distance each time if you ran it separately for all three tunes. This is because the GD profiles for all three tunes are virtually identical >28 Hz.
While the audibility of GD in subwoofers seems to be an evergreen topic, it is IMO overrated. While I actually advised Josh to add the 1.0 and 1.5 cycles to his GD charts in order to provide at least some frame of reference, those values were referenced from GD audibility studies conducted at much higher frequencies. To the best of my knowledge, there has yet to be a definitive study with a statistically high confidence level which clearly defines the audibility of GD at very deep (i.e., <30 Hz) bass frequencies. No one listening to a PB13U in the 20 Hz mode would subjectively think 'gee the 18-22 Hz bandwidth is obviously lagging way behind the mid/upper bass regions' - we just don't subjectively perceive extremely deep bass that way. Josh basically makes a statement to this effect in all his subwoofer reviews, and has similar thoughts on the whole GD audibility issue as it relates to subwoofers.
Things like a flat frequency response, low distortion, high dynamic output capability, excellent bandwidth uniformity, and a lack of audible overdrive artifacts have far more influence on the subjective listening experience than does the GD profile of the subwoofer.