Anyone using L/R Mains with 4" Woofers?

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StrawHatRonin

Enthusiast
Just curious. I currently have RSL CG24s (MTM) as L/R mains which have 4" woofers. They seem to perform well. Have the AVR crossover set at 90Hz. Wondering though if I'm missing out by not having bookshelf speakers with 5" or 6" woofers. Recently upgraded the center speaker to the Klipsch RP-450c (5" woofers) and am happy with it.
 
everettT

everettT

Audioholic Spartan
Just curious. I currently have RSL CG24s (MTM) as L/R mains which have 4" woofers. They seem to perform well. Have the AVR crossover set at 90Hz. Wondering though if I'm missing out by not having bookshelf speakers with 5" or 6" woofers. Recently upgraded the center speaker to the Klipsch RP-450c (5" woofers) and am happy with it.
4" woofers can only give you so much below the transition frequency but if you have capable subs, it should be irrelevant if properly designed.
 
S

StrawHatRonin

Enthusiast
4" woofers can only give you so much below the transition frequency but if you have capable subs, it should be irrelevant if properly designed.
I have a RSL 12S but am saving for a Klipsch RP-1400SW or maybe one of the higher end ported HSU models because the 12S needs a little help with the living area space I have (3500+ CF)
 
AcuDefTechGuy

AcuDefTechGuy

Audioholic Jedi
The smallest bass woofer in any of my speakers (even in-ceiling speakers) is 8”, so I don’t do small woofers. :D
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
How far do you sit from the speakers in the 3500cuft room? How loud do you listen? In my similar sized living room I found (single) 5.25" midwoofers on the light side (but work great in my small bedroom). Perhaps dual subs would be something to consider in any case or even raising crossover....
 
ski2xblack

ski2xblack

Audioholic Samurai
Missing out? Depends. You likely have a dynamic range bottleneck with those particular mains.

If your listening habits don't exceed those limits it doesn't really matter, does it?

On the other hand, running small mains in the red will result in higher distortion than larger, more capable mains operating well within their limits.

So it depends on listening habits, your desired system performance goals, in your particular room.

RSL and Hsu subs have better performance/$ than Klipsch subs, unless they're half off.
 
S

StrawHatRonin

Enthusiast
How far do you sit from the speakers in the 3500cuft room? How loud do you listen? In my similar sized living room I found (single) 5.25" midwoofers on the light side (but work great in my small bedroom). Perhaps dual subs would be something to consider in any case or even raising crossover....
Thanks for the reply. I sit roughly 9 feet from the mains and listen at moderatly loud levels. I am using a second 12” Bic sub but I’m selling it to go towards a real sub.
 
everettT

everettT

Audioholic Spartan
I have a RSL 12S but am saving for a Klipsch RP-1400SW or maybe one of the higher end ported HSU models because the 12S needs a little help with the living area space I have (3500+ CF)
With your mains I'd want a sub that plays well into 200hz range and cross as high as possible and with multiple subs that would help with localization. For theater I tend to cross higher than most would recommend but that is what has worked for me. In my stereo setups I constantly am going back and forth with the crossover even though I don't need subs with them.
 
S

StrawHatRonin

Enthusiast
Missing out? Depends. You likely have a dynamic range bottleneck with those particular mains.

If your listening habits don't exceed those limits it doesn't really matter, does it?

On the other hand, running small mains in the red will result in higher distortion than larger, more capable mains operating well within their limits.

So it depends on listening habits, your desired system performance goals, in your particular room.

RSL and Hsu subs have better performance/$ than Klipsch subs, unless they're half off.
I never push them very hard. The only way I’d get the Klipsch RP-1400SW would be at the $700 Adorama deal. I can’t find much objective data on it on how it compares to other subs.
 
ski2xblack

ski2xblack

Audioholic Samurai
I would personally go with a second RSL 12S over the Klipsch sub, and if necessary experiment with higher crossover as everett and lovin suggested, as that will sidestep dynamic range limits somewhat.
 
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William Lemmerhirt

William Lemmerhirt

Audioholic Overlord
I would also get a second 12s. It will be much easier to integrate with the first one and overall will be better. I personally like larger, or multiple woofers for a variety of reasons(mine are 12”, and even my surrounds have dual 5.25). One reason being smaller woofers can’t do the upper bass and midrange regions with any real impact. You can raise the XO, but IME you end up with a tubby sound, and the midband just doesn’t come through like it should. Of course every room, system and user preference will be different. IMO, I would be missing out by using those mains despite the fact that they sound very good. Mileage is different for everyone though. This could be a case of FOMO, but it could also be MO, lol.
 
Verdinut

Verdinut

Audioholic Spartan
Woofers are designed to produce low frequencies and in order to do so, they have to move a lot of air. and 4 inch drivers cannot be considered as woofers because of their small cone areas.

To produce a frequency an octave lower than a set frequency, the woofer has to move four times more to achieve the same SPL as that original set frequency. It's obvious that a 4" driver is quite inefficient in producing low frequencies also taking into account its limited cone excursion (XMax).
 
S

StrawHatRonin

Enthusiast
Woofers are designed to produce low frequencies and in order to do so, they have to move a lot of air. and 4 inch drivers cannot be considered as woofers because of their small cone areas.

To produce a frequency an octave lower than a set frequency, the woofer has to move four times more to achieve the same SPL as that original set frequency. It's obvious that a 4" driver is quite inefficient in producing low frequencies also taking into account its limited cone excursion (XMax).
Sounds like I just need to shift the CG24s over to surrounds (system would be 7.1 then) and get some new bookshelves with at least 6” cones. Was looking at FR when I first set them up as mains but failed to take into account the steep FR curve drop off that all speakers have near their limits.

Edit: well duh, also have Kef Q300's that I'm running as surrounds. Looked up the FR and these go down to 42Hz. I'm just going to use the Kef's as mains, CG24s as surrounds and get a second sub.
 
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