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  1. #1
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    I have 3 subs in my speaker setup and 4 towers for my rears that produce 20hz or lower. Have you thought about trying out the new sub in the rear? If your rears don't produce ultra low frequencies you might want to wire them through the sub.
    Definitive Technology Fan, Owner and Advocate!!!!! never paying retail IS half the fun of buying audio products!!!! Good shopping!

  2. #2
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    Chimera128: That's an interesting suggestion that I never though of before. My rear speakers produce bass, but only to 36 Hz I think. I've never been able to tell where the bass was being generated from really, if there were higher frequencies produced by the rears, it seemed as thought the sound came from behind.
    I'm not sure as to the exact technical details, but it seems to me that any LFE signal below your set cutoff frequency, whether emitted from the front or rear speakers is channeled to the subwoofer. If bass waves are non-local by nature, what benefit is there to having a rear sub? Wouldn't my front sub still fire when bass signals run below the cutoff frequency?

    For my purposes, I'm really more interested in music playback, both 2 channel stereo and 5.1 sources.
    Piece-it pete suggested that the stereo soundstage and imaging can be improved by adding a second sub-woofer.
    I've always been under the impression that bass signals emitted by a sub were non-directional, suggesting that stereo subs wouldn't add much benefit...am I way off?

  3. #3
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    I was considering more in terms of multichannel music reproduction. All low frequency information is sent to the subs with movies. However, even though your speakers produce bass to 36hz, you would probably hear some difference with the sub in the back. I would try it in front and back and see which works best for you.
    Definitive Technology Fan, Owner and Advocate!!!!! never paying retail IS half the fun of buying audio products!!!! Good shopping!

  4. #4
    My custom user title This Guy's Avatar
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    Well with my young ears, I find bass signals at about 70 hz and higher are directional. This is a pain cause the crossover on my sub is fixed at 100 hz from my receiver so there's a lot of audible output all the way to a little past 120 hertz, and the only place to put my sub is behind me so I can localize some sounds from the sub when playing music. So If you have a relatively high crossover point, I can understand having stereo subs, but if you cross them over low, there's no need for another one, unless it needs more volume at the ultra low frequencies.

    _joey

  5. #5
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    Please let us know the results kex, I was interested in doing the same thing.

  6. #6
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    Little late posting...

    but hey. It's another sub! why not eh! Get it (like you are) and fool around with it! If you're getting it for dirt cheap then what have you got to lose!? I have no problem with adding more subs, you might only get a 3dB increase but oh well! You have two subs!

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