I can accept that.
Josh Ricci (who provides the data for Data-bass) seems to think most people hear music as tighter if bass response is limited, not just "snobby audiophiles":
However, if adding bass above a certain level consistently undermines the perceived tightness of music, isn't avoiding that worthwhile? The live performances I attend (most often acoustic instruments with some mics) do not have that problem, so why should I have to listen to it on my home system?
Are you saying it is better to have the extra bass because we just think it sounds bad but it really doesn't???
Make no mistake, I enjoy the added sound of a sub when listening to music on most speakers. However, I do consider it optional with the Philharmonic 3's. Why is it that they sound tight at +/-2db @ 25Hz? For music, that is not at all bass-shy!
There is a few things to unpack here.
First of all, we hear mid and upper bass so much better than deep bass. It takes human hearing longer to sense deep frequencies and longer to recognize pitch in low frequencies. In conventional music, there just isn't much of it, especially very deep bass where human pitch recognition is nil. A deep bass cycle take a lot longer to complete than a mid bass cycle; consider that a 20 Hz cycle takes ten times longer to complete than a 200 Hz cycle.
Now consider that a deep bass sound must be MUCH greater in sound pressure level than a mid bass sound to be heard as the same level of loudness. We are talking 100 times to over 10,000 times greater SPL depending on the mid bass amplitudes. Now factor in the tremendous amount of
auditory masking that happens as we go down in bass frequencies. A speaker that simply omits deep bass sound will mask much less mid bass sound, and mid bass is much more easily discerned.
The 'detail' and 'articulation' people think they hear in bass frequencies is just mid and upper bass. It is only a matter of frequency response, nothing else. The more upper and mid bass you have, the more 'detailed' your bass sound will be, due to the nature of human hearing. Conversely the more deep bass you have, the less detail you will be able to hear. I don't want to put words in Josh Ricci's mouth, but I think this is what he might have meant. 'Tighter' bass is just more upper bass where sound is more easily distinguished.
I do think some subwoofers get a reputation for more 'detail' through the use of
euphonic distortion; in other words, they are deliberately using even-order harmonic distortion products to elevate more easily heard upper bass sound over that of the fundamental in order to create the illusion of more detail. There is one brand of 'audiophile' subwoofer that I think may be banking on this tactic. I know that some older live-sound bass drivers used to deliberately generate second-order harmonics in order to goose up kick drum sounds.
It might be worth mentioning that a system that has deep bass might sound more 'laggy' than a system without due to things like flutter noise from some analog artifact, or maybe vinyl record rumble, or some low frequency noise that was accidentally boosted in compression the final mix but was missed by the sound engineer. A sound system that can reproduce deep bass is simply reproducing more of the input signal than a system that can not. In certain instances accuracy can come at the cost of musical content.
BTW, what subs do you currently have? Did you upgrade from the ULS-15's?
Still have the ULS-15 mk1s for my music system. There are better subs out there, but the mk1s do fine, I have a good response and enough headroom, so there is no need to replace them, as I wouldn't gain much. My theater uses two Outlaw Audio LFM-1 EXs and two Hsu VTF3 mk3s.