
MR.MAGOO
Audioholic Field Marshall
Thanks for the tips, Gene! I now have two subs and will try the 'Two Sub Midwall Placement' scheme in my rectangular studio apartment.
The TN-1220s have to be regarded as classics. A very good design, and its sad that Hsu discontinued cylinder subs, but understandable since box subs are in such greater demand. Incidentally, Hsu still has some of those 500 watt amps available. Hsu was actually the first to sell cylinder subs in a home audio application. The Bazooka subs from SAS were the earliest cylinder subs that I can see, releasing them back in 1985, but that is for car audio.We were dealers for HSU Subwoofers. Outstanding value and deep clean Bass. I own a number of them. I know Dr. Hsu. I met with him at the CEDIA Shows. He's a genius.
In my own HT, I have a pair of HSU TN-1220's. A very amazing configuration. These are not a current model, but I feel these are just the best. It consists of two Tube Subwoofer with 12" woofers. You can keep them vertical (about 48" tall), but mine lay down and are concealed by sofa furniture. They are heard but not seen. Here is the interesting part. I have their matching 500 watt HSU Subwoofer amplifier. This is great since the placement of the tubes are not seen. The hefty Amp is on my rack with all the rest of my system. It really does the trick, as the bass is incredible, but not booming or rattling. Very clean deep bass down to 18 Hz. I have no desire to replace them. My electronics are separates. If I get a chance, I will post my HT System; when, I'm not sure. My processor is an Integra 40.3. Love it. My system is 10.2 with height channels as well.
I think you meant to say: SVS. They previously were in competition, since at the time they both made cylindrical Subwoofers.The TN-1220s have to be regarded as classics. A very good design, and its sad that Hsu discontinued cylinder subs, but understandable since box subs are in such greater demand. Incidentally, Hsu still has some of those 500 watt amps available. Hsu was actually the first to sell cylinder subs in a home audio application. The Bazooka subs from SAS were the earliest cylinder subs that I can see, releasing them back in 1985, but that is for car audio.
I would recommend only splitting one time with a Y-splitter and just daisy chain to the other two subs if the subs you connect have a pass through. Otherwise, get youself a mDSP unit that has 2 inputs and 4 buffered outputs. Then you can control delay, level and EQ for each sub individually while also not running a risk of damaging the sub output driver of your AV receiver.I got 4 Definitive Technology 8060 towers. I do enjoy them. Each has a built in power subwoofer. Now, it may be that it is unfortunate that the placement of the subwoofers are a lock and may not be ideal. But, I've got what I got and want to make the best of it.
To that end, I am considering running cable to each from my older Yamaha amp. The following questions come to mind:
1) Is it okay to split the single sub out on the amp to 4 subs?
2) is there an issue cable length, i.e. short runs mixed with long runs, say 10ft and 35ft?
You don't want to parallel connect 6 subs to a single line level output. That can definitely cause problems in the long run. I'd limit it to 2 connections and either daisy chain the other subs in series with each other, or get an mDSP 2x4 and use the buffered outputs to connect the subs. The latter is preferred b/c now you will have independent delay and EQ settings for each channel to help optimize and integrate.I have 6 subwoofers in my Home Theatre/Mancave. (My wife is an Angel.) Two are powered, a DT SC4000, and a Paradigm PDR-8 v.3, and the other four passive subs I built or modified. I used RCA y splitters to connect the subs to my Sony STR-DH770 7.2 channel receiver. The four passive subs are connected, two each to two Yamaha amps, an A-700, and an MX-600U. There are Harrison FMOD low pass filters connected to both sub outputs from the Sony receiver that only allow frequencies 70hz and below to pass through to the amps in all subwoofers. The system sounds great, to me and everyone who has heard it. My question is, I saw where you said that it is possible to overload the output from the receiver by connecting too many subs. I do not want to do that, and I have thought that the 4 amps powering the 6 subs are likely drawing a lot of current from the sub output stage of the Sony receiver.