Results 1 to 9 of 9
  1. #1
    AR Newbie Registered Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    1

    Sub Woofer help please

    I am a music guy, not much on home theater. Running an Outlaw 1050 for power, a pair of PSB Image B25 fronts. I need to know what sub woofer you would recommend for a room that is relatively small, tile floors. I am looking for quality bass to augment my PSB's. My budget is around 350.00

    Thanks for your advice.

    Cheers!


  2. #2
    Forum Regular luvtolisten's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Rochester, NY
    Posts
    526
    Hi Keywestguy and welcome! Nice receiver you have by the way.

    I have the HSU STF-2, I have been happy with it, although it is said to be more musical, I use it for HT as well. It runs for $349,plus shipping.

    http://www.hsuresearch.com/products/stf-2.html

    Keep in mind this is a down firing subwoofer, you may need to put a throw rug under it on tile floors, or maybe not. I don't run PSB's but I'm sure someone who does, may have a better recommendation for you, but this sub will blend well with most speakers. I have run Paradigm's, Wharfedales, AV 123 XL's , BIC 62's, and Infinity Beta 20's with them and all blended well. If you're not concerned about HT, then I'd go with an 8 inch sub and save some $. This is a nice little sub.(Energy EWS-8) I have this one too, and it also blends well, very close to the HSU,(for music) and a lot less expensive.

    http://www.highdecibels.com/proddetail.asp?prod=ESW-8

    This one is down firing too.
    Last edited by luvtolisten; 05-20-2009 at 05:44 PM.

  3. #3
    Forum Regular blackraven's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    St. Paul, Minnesota
    Posts
    5,421
    I would consider the Mirage Omni S8 or Mirage prestige

    http://www.vanns.com/shop/servlet/it...-black-a-stock

    I would also consider this Energy sub. Energy and Mirage are made by the same company!

    http://www.vanns.com/shop/servlet/it...6/energy-s10-3

    My choice would be the Mirage as it is an 8" with 400watts peak. Which would be fine for a small room. The Energy would be a good choice if you ever plan on using it in a larger room.
    Pass Labs X250 amp, BAT Vk-51se Preamp,
    Thorens TD-145 TT, Bellari phono preamp, Nagaoka MP-200 Cartridge
    Magnepan QR1.6 speakers
    Luxman DA-06 DAC
    Van Alstine Ultra Plus Hybrid Tube DAC
    Dual Martin Logan Original Dynamo Subs
    Parasound A21 amp
    Vintage Luxman T-110 tuner
    Magnepan MMG's, Grant Fidelity DAC-11, Class D CDA254 amp
    Monitor Audio S1 speakers, PSB B6 speakers
    Vintage Technic's Integrated amp
    Music Hall 25.2 CDP
    Adcom GFR 700 AVR
    Cables- Cardas, Silnote, BJC
    Velodyne CHT 8 sub

  4. #4
    Forum Regular pixelthis's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    tuscaloosa
    Posts
    5,528

    Cool

    Quote Originally Posted by keywestguy
    I am a music guy, not much on home theater. Running an Outlaw 1050 for power, a pair of PSB Image B25 fronts. I need to know what sub woofer you would recommend for a room that is relatively small, tile floors. I am looking for quality bass to augment my PSB's. My budget is around 350.00

    Thanks for your advice.

    Cheers!

    Nothing.
    A sub is great for HT, but if its music you crave a pair of decent speakers with decent bass is all you need.
    I have a Velodyne 8" myself, an exelent sub I bought used, when the starship Enterprize flies over my head it flies over my head.
    But I turn it off for music.
    But that is just a personal bias. If you have small speakers of course you will need a sub.
    I have found that B&W has a very musical sub.
    But for accuracy I get by on my 602 s2's , which is what I prefer for music.
    Attached Images Attached Images  
    LG 42", integra 6.9, B&W 602s2, CC6 center, dm305rears, b&w
    sub asw2500
    Panny DVDA player
    sharp Aquos BLU player
    pronto remote, technics antique direct drive TT
    Samsung SACD/DVDA player
    emotiva upa-2 two channel amp

  5. #5
    Audio/HT Nut version 1.3a
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Posts
    1,085
    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Nothing flies over my head
    http://www.stoogeworld.com/_Stooge%2...ves/brains.wav

  6. #6
    Forum Regular luvtolisten's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Rochester, NY
    Posts
    526
    That is too funny! I had to play 5 or 6 times. Thanks for the laugh!

  7. #7
    Audio/HT Nut version 1.3a
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Posts
    1,085

  8. #8
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    SF Bay Area
    Posts
    6,883
    If you have a small room and primarily listen to music, I would not recommend a ported subwoofer because of the low end room gain that you get from small rooms. Most subs on the market are ported because of their greater efficiency and higher maximum output. They work fine in larger rooms, but can be problematic in smaller ones.

    You should look into sealed subs, because their low end rolloff better approximates the boundary gain. Also, sealed subs will generally provide more low end extension, which is really all you want given that you already use high quality bookshelf speakers. Sealed subs include the Dayton kits (highly recommended on this site), the Rocket subs, the Martin Logan Dynamo, and other entry level sealed subs from B&W, Atlantic Technology, and REL. The 10" Dayton Titanic kit will run you about $400. All the other options start around $600.

    But, regardless of which sub you opt for, your room will very likely create a lot of severe peaks and nulls, and to that end I highly recommend that you also use a parametric equalizer to even out the response curve. The smaller the room, the more problematic these peaks will be.

    My room is about 13' x 18', basically a medium sized room, but out of the box my subwoofer was unlistenable. Using a $99 Behringer Feedback Destroyer as a subwoofer EQ, I was able to dial down a +14 db peak. Those peaks cause boominess, which makes you set the subwoofer level too low, which in turn makes the bass sound anemic overall until those peaks hit. Dialing down the peaks allows you to more accurately set the bass level, and that will give you smoother and fuller sounding bass. Ideally, you want the sub to disappear and simply augment the lowest of the lows. IMO, in a small room that's only possible if you equalize the sub.

    Search some of the previous threads on the Behringer Feedback Destroyer. Everyone on this board who owns one will tell you how big a difference a parametric EQ can make with a subwoofer.
    Wooch's Home Theater 2.0 (Pics)
    Panasonic VIERA TH-C50FD18 50" 1080p
    Paradigm Reference Studio 40, CC, and 20 v.2
    Adire Audio Rava (EQ: Behringer Feedback Destroyer DSP1124)
    Yamaha RX-A1030
    Dual CS5000 (Ortofon OM30 Super)
    Sony UBP-X800
    Sony Playstation 3 (MediaLink OS X Server)
    Sony ES SCD-C2000ES
    JVC HR-S3912U
    Directv HR44 and WVB
    Logitech Harmony 700
    iPhone 5s/iPad 3
    Linksys WES610



    The Neverending DVD/BD Collection

    Subwoofer Setup and Parametric EQ Results *Dead Link*

  9. #9
    Crank it up, dude! huh? hydroman's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Chesapeake Beach MD
    Posts
    212
    X2 for the sealed enclosure sub.

    The dayton/ 10"

    The difference is the clarity of the bass guitar (presence) for me.
    H/K AVR635 7.1
    Denon DVD900
    AE AEGIS III Mains
    ION USB Turntable w/ Shure M97XE
    15" Titanic III Sealed Enclosure Sub
    Dayton Rackmount 1000W :O
    Denon Surrounds
    Sony Bravia KDL40S2000

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •