Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
Bass is not defined as one homogenous region of frequencies like you are trying to present here.
LOL! Whatever you say! Who said anything about "homogenous"?

Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
The bass between 80-120hz CANNOT be included in this statement based on Tom Nousaine white paper on stereo bass.
Mr. Car Stereo? Great expert!

Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
I know of no full range loudspeaker that has a crossover point at 160hz to any driver, do you?
Is there an echo in the room? That was my (unanswered) question to you in post # 12 when you said the "highest crossover point is 120 hz"! They're usually much higher!

Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
Well, it is pretty well understood that acoustical treatment is not very effective below 70hz, and the amount that has to be deployed to deal with frequencies above that to 200hz will negatively reduce the amount energy in the midrange and high frequencies in the room.
By whom? Mr. Car Stereo again? Obviously you've never heard a Rives Audio designed room or one using any number of commercial products.


Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
And to answer your question, yes I would. Trying to EQ out a suckout will reduce the headroom of the system itself.
That is your preference and I have plenty of headroom. At the expense of stating the obvious, the use of any tone control or EQ boost will do that.

Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
A 2db suckout is completely inaudible ...
You really cannot hear a 2 db difference in level? Then it wouldn't matter to you.

End of transmission. You have the last word. Still shaking my head. "Bass is not a range of frequencies" Ok!

rw