Subwoofer Product and or placement recommendation

C

Capt'n_Ron

Enthusiast
Room is 2700 Cu/ft. rectangular shape.
front wall corner subwoofer placement is not an option due to room width and main speaker location.
Usage 70% movies and 30% music.
Budget, want to stay below 1500 delivered.

Considering a mid wall sub possibly a HSU VTF-TN1
or
Front wall placement inside of either the Left or Right main below the FP screen. This would have to be a smaller VTF3 MK5 HP

Appreciated any input. Thanks
 
W

Wardog555

Full Audioholic
Nobody can say where to place a subwoofer as you need to test and measure each location.
Under no circumstances do you ever go with a smaller subwoofer based on where you want to place it. This doesn't work in your favor for performance reasons.
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
Might even consider multiple subs rather than a single. Positioning in your room would be hard to guess at. Old saying that subs work best where they need to go, not necessarily where you need them to go :) The Hsu subs you mention are quite good in any case.
 
S

shadyJ

Speaker of the House
Staff member
Room is 2700 Cu/ft. rectangular shape.
front wall corner subwoofer placement is not an option due to room width and main speaker location.
Usage 70% movies and 30% music.
Budget, want to stay below 1500 delivered.

Considering a mid wall sub possibly a HSU VTF-TN1
or
Front wall placement inside of either the Left or Right main below the FP screen. This would have to be a smaller VTF3 MK5 HP

Appreciated any input. Thanks
I would look at multiple subs if possible. Maybe 2 VTF-2 mk5s if possible? That would be a killer setup and potentially have a better room response than a single sub.
 
C

Capt'n_Ron

Enthusiast
I would look at multiple subs if possible. Maybe 2 VTF-2 mk5s if possible? That would be a killer setup and potentially have a better room response than a single sub.
yes that would be an option, concerned about chuffing though. I had a single monoprice ported 12" sub and it was underwhelming in the space. I was considering stretching the budget for 2 vtf-3 mk5 hp for duals.

I will try that in the REW simulator for alternate options.
 
S

shadyJ

Speaker of the House
Staff member
yes that would be an option, concerned about chuffing though. I had a single monoprice ported 12" sub and it was underwhelming in the space. I was considering stretching the budget for 2 vtf-3 mk5 hp for duals.

I will try that in the REW simulator for alternate options.
Two VTF-3 mk5s would be pretty insane. You would have a ton of headroom for sure.
 
C

Capt'n_Ron

Enthusiast
I think I can get by with one sub for know. At least willing to try that first due to budgeting. the rew simulator did confirm that from 30hz down the response gets smoother with dual subs. dual subs would likely rule out any potential chuffing issue due to room gain.
 
H

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
I think I can get by with one sub for know. At least willing to try that first due to budgeting. the rew simulator did confirm that from 30hz down the response gets smoother with dual subs. dual subs would likely rule out any potential chuffing issue due to room gain.
Don't place it at the middle of any wall.

Chuffing comes from excessive air velocity in the cabinet's vent/port, not room placement.

Or, it can be caused by everything exceeding expectations. :)
 
C

Capt'n_Ron

Enthusiast
I thought bad room placement would require more gain, in essence trying to fix the problem with the volume knob.

REW says a rear corner placement is best for me. mid wall is a no go for me, says REW..
 
William Lemmerhirt

William Lemmerhirt

Audioholic Overlord
I thought bad room placement would require more gain, in essence trying to fix the problem with the volume knob.

REW says a rear corner placement is best for me. mid wall is a no go for me, says REW..
The problem is you can’t boost a null created by the room/placement. A null is basically a vacuum, and turning up the gain will increase output, but you won’t know it at the MLP. Everywhere else in the room and house will definitely get the extra output, and you’ll essentially use up all of your headroom and possibly destroy your sub/s.
Phase nulls, can usually be dealt with by using phase/delay/distance tweaks.
 
C

Capt'n_Ron

Enthusiast
The problem is you can’t boost a null created by the room/placement. A null is basically a vacuum, and turning up the gain will increase output, but you won’t know it at the MLP. Everywhere else in the room and house will definitely get the extra output, and you’ll essentially use up all of your headroom and possibly destroy your sub/s.
Phase nulls, can usually be dealt with by using phase/delay/distance tweaks.
thanks for clarifying that!
 
H

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
I thought bad room placement would require more gain, in essence trying to fix the problem with the volume knob.

REW says a rear corner placement is best for me. mid wall is a no go for me, says REW..
Regardless of what REW shows, you still need to decide if it sounds best and one thing REW can't deal with is the question "What happens to the sound if I move 12" in any direction?". REW uses one mic, we have two ears and our brain does a lot of error management. Our hearing also tells us when problems exist, whether we can define it/them, or not.

Phase cancellations, as William mentioned, can't be removed with gain/level, although delaying the sound from one source can. If you use an AVR with Audyssey, set the distance increment to the smallest available and adjust it one increment at a time. Denon uses 1 foot and .1 foot- when I used an AVR, I messed with that frequently, basically to train myself to hear the differences and I would watch the response on the screen while using REW, etc. Subwoofers with a variable phase control rather than a 0°/180° switch can only be correct 50% of the time unless speakers are moved, the listener moves or the room is treated.

In my case, the room's problems caused me to build a new set of speakers and when that wasn't quite good enough, I needed to deal with the reflections with acoustic panels. Comments that they're unnecessary aside, they did a great job of removing the phase cancellations. I didn't even bother to use my subwoofer (it was a long evaluation period where I wasn't even bothered by what the sub wasn't providing) until about the middle of last year. Oddly enough, I had to do almost nothing to get it to blend with the main speakers but I did use REW/other RTA apps when placing the panels and making sure the sub/system response was smooth. Ultimately, the sound is most important, but if it can't be placed in front, it may require some trial & error testing to find 'the spot'.
 

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