More or less bass
Have been reading the bass / LFE / crossover / small-large “dispute” with interest.
Darien, I guess that no matter what would be “theoretical best” or even “scientifical correct”, in the end what counts is the sound that pleases you most no matter what the settings are or “should be”. It is a matter of experimenting and personal taste.
With your original setting of 60Hz (in the receiver and I reckon the cutoff on your sub as high as possible!?) and front-large I can imagine you heard more sound (bass) as opposed to front-small, you actually have doubled your front bass output (not the LFE output) below 60 Hz, for those basses now come from you front speakers (as far as they can manage) plus from the sub. Yes that may increase your bass ... not necessarily so btw, for with bass coming from multiple sources room acoustics start to play a dominant role.
That is the funny thing with all these discussions … what we seem to forget is that room acoustrics and speaker and sub placement and listener position play a far larger role in bass reproduction than all the rest. This has to do with resonance frequencies and standing waves. There will be locations in your room where there is virtuyally no bass of certain freq and places where levels are excessive, differences can be as large as over 15dB. Multiple bass sources generally worsen the problems for the phase differences between the different (3) sources of soundpressure at your hearing position cancel out or amplify several low frequencies. Which is why generally speaking a receiver crossover set at 80Hz (the THX spec) and all speakers to small is a good solution. Now all bass (below 80Hz) from all speakers is directed to one single source of air pressure, the sub, and that generally gives a smoother overall result. I said generally. And I said, no matter what theory says, let your own ears be the judge and pick the settings you like.
A very good article on the subject is:
www.harman.com/wp/Loudspeakers&RoomsPt3.pdf
Actually a “must read” for everyone discussing in this thread!
Best regards and have a good time fine tuning. Isn’t this a nice hobby, lots of fun combined with frustration due to your terrible room acoustics that may make your valuable speaker investment sound “boomy” in stead of “tight”?
QubyB