I wouldn't think that the SUB1200 has a sophisticated limiter.
Agreed, that is what I meant when I said:
Obviously, budget constraints do not allow exotic controls in a $150 sub,: yet, somehow, Dayton Audio appears to limit the signal in such a way as to allow the sub to gracefully deal with a signal that is beyond its capability.
Is there an easy way of detecting if this is happening?
Too bad you don't review this sub, it is not a $600 sub, but it does behave very nicely for $150, and it would be good to have your evaluation/measurements!
If it is reaching the mechanical limits (which makes sense given the price), I am impressed with how inoffensively it does it!
I set a pair of these up at my girlfriends house and am always impressed at how well they work given the cost.
I don't think of them so much as real subwoofers, but they have a lot to offer to a pair of bookshelf speakers (PIO BS-22).