Thanks for the responses.
I changed the sub to bypass, and under 'crossover' in receiver options is at 60.
Theres another option page under Bass, there is LPF to LFE option and the lowest I can go is 80. There is also an option to have LFE + Main, I'm guessing that main is my front speakers.
I just want LFE only don't I? Why is there two cross over options is that going to cause a hole in my sound?
Thanks!
Have you run Audyssey? Audyssey MultEQ XT will measure the
in-room frequency response of each speaker and the sub. This frequency response is dependant on the speaker/subs relationship to the room and it's furnishings and can be quite different to the published specifications. Audyssey will report what it detects is each speaker's -3dB roll-off frequency and the AVR's processor will choose a
suggested initial crossover frequency above that from those that are available to it. You are free to change each speaker's crossover frequency, however you should only ever raise the crossover from the initial one.
Never go lower than the crossover as this can leave a gap in the frequency response for that channel.
My general advice is to raise the crossover to a frequency just below the point where you can readily "localise" the sub (ie. pick the spot it's in) when playing familiar program material. 80Hz is generally a good starting point and you can advance upwards from there. You will find after a brief period of experimentation chopping and changing crossovers that you'll settle on a preferred crossover frequency and forget about it for months/years. A couple of benefits of higher crossovers are:
- Each time you drop an octave, maintaining the same SPL requires displacement to increase fourfold. If you hand off the excursion heavy lower octaves to the sub, this makes life much easier for the mains and they will do a better job of producing upper bass and midrange.
- Displacement requires power, and the lower octaves are therefore power hungry and are the limiting factor in how much power an amp can produce cleanly. Again, tasking as much of this burden as possible to a powered sub or two is much less taxing on the AVR's internal amps.
LPF for LFE: This is
not a crossover. This is a variable low-pass filter that acts on the LFE (.1) channel only. Dolby's LFE channel is bandwidth limited to 120Hz (a "brickwall") so sound engineers tend to roll content off below that. DTS's LFE channel is theoretically full range, however by convention or for consistency, sound engineers roll the content off at or below 120Hz. So set this at 120Hz (default) and forget about it for good.
LFE+Main: Confusingly, in Denonworld "Main" refers to
all satellite channels in this context. And yes, leave this setting at the default "LFE". Have a read of page 96 & 98 of your owners manual about this. If you have trouble deciphering it, please get back to us.
This is a great Denon resource:
batpigworld | the "Denon-to-English" dictionary | your one-stop shop for Denon help.