Sunday, April 26, 2020

How to Not Buy a Subwoofer

(Subtitle: Everything you really should have asked first but didn't because you thought this was going to be simple)

Update January 2021: 

This article is very theoretical.  If you want a practical, step by step take on how and why I avoided using a subwoofer for music please read here.

Introduction

Getting great bass in a room is one of the greatest challenges audiophiles will face. While interacting with a lot of audiophiles it is clear to me that getting great bass is important and, of course, the discussion of a subwoofer often comes up, but lets be honest, no audiophile wants to buy a subwoofer. We don't want to go, pay thousands of dollars and bring home more large boxes to take up more room in our home. The end goal is actually to have great bass and the expense, shipping and placement of a subwoofer is a means to that end.

The point of this article is to introduce several topics related to listening to a system great bass which you should consider, especially if your first and only thought to getting great bass in your room has been to buy a subwoofer. This post will hopefully be a survey of solutions before we get to subwoofers, and we do in fact discuss buying at the end.

VTF-15H MK2 Subwoofer
HSU Research VTF-15H MK II
At some point we will often consider getting a sub-woofer for one of these reasons:

  1. Small speaker with limited bass output 
  2. They need more bass despite having a floor standing speaker
  3. They've heard that a sub-woofer can really enhance the rest of the audio range
It is true that all of these items will be improved with a well integrated and well performing sub woofer but getting to "well integrated" is be fraught with complications, not to mention the cost and size of a sub.  Truthfully, very few audiophiles with a sub woofer know how to properly set up a sub, and most tire of trying before they are done, with mediocre results.

Don't get me wrong, I love subwoofers but a subwoofer is a glorious addition to a system only when it is properly set up because otherwise it is a nightmare.  In summary:

Without automatic room correction like Dirac or ARC the proper installation of a subwoofer is much more difficult and time consuming than buying it and putting in a corner. It is very easy for the average consumer to get this wrong.

Because subs are complicated it is worthwhile to explore alternatives which I list below and along the way we'll talk about room acoustics which greatly enhance a sub's performance.

Speaker Placement

The closer a speaker is to walls the more bass you'll hear out of them. Usually manufacturers recommend a specific distance away from the rear wall, but remember that side walls count as well. The legendary Allison speakers were designed to be up against the rear wall, and some Snells also rely on very close placement.  Of course, with closer wall placement you also have more early reflections, so your ideal combination might be closer to the wall, and more mid/treble absorption on the floor and walls. 

Tone Controls

There's no such thing as a neutral system when it comes to music playback. Unfortunately the best we can do is try to bowl down the middle of the lane and hope we get a strike more often than not.  Every recording and every mastering engineer was listening to a system very different than yours, and these systems, even if we could buy one exactly to match have changed over time. It is no lie that during the 70's and 80's single driver boom boxes were the standard often recorded to. 

Lets be clear:  A subwoofer IS a tone control.  If you are trying to use a sub to maintain some sort of religious purity, you've already lost, so just accept we are all sinners in the eyes of whatever audiophile purist church is out there and go all in, you will feel better, get to your happy place and spend less money.  There are generally two types of tone controls.

Dial Tone Controls

Schiit Loki

The point is that tone controls that sound good exist and are built into preamps integrateds and receivers or you can add a Schiit Loki which gets great buzz. Not all gear has great sounding tone controls, but even if they add some haze, the benefit of hearing a cymbal sing correctly or adjusting for aging hearing easily outweighs any haze.


Digital Tone Controls

These are now quite common either with room correction, outboard units like miniDSP as well as built into streaming software like Roon. They can be quite effective but require different levels of measurement and configuration. The big benefit here is precision. You can treat a narrow bass mode with a DSP in a way you can't get any other way. Even if you do buy a subwoofer, you should seriously consider an EQ somewhere in your chain, as the lower you go, the more room modes you will activate and having an EQ to clips them greatly enhances the performance.

To give you an idea of how these manual type of DSP equalization processes can work please see my previous post. It uses Roon as an example, but the principles of measurement and parametric filters are the same.


Automatic Room Correction

Automatic room correction can also be called "automatic sub integraters."  In addition to the automatic setup of parametric equalizers they will automatically configure the most important and difficult settings a subwoofer needs to sound good if not excellent.  Brands like the Anthem STR line, Lyngdorf, Dirac, Audyssey etc. are all making room correction mainstream, not to mention home theater processors. The ease of use of room correction systems is not to be underestimated.

One bit of advice: room correction systems have different goals which have been chosen by humans so they results won't sound the same.  You may really not like the choices one system makes vs. another so it is worth listening to them ahead of time.

Personally I like Dirac and JL Audio (subwoofer only) and Anthem, but I have not heard every system. Please audition and compare for yourself.


Amplifier

https://www.stereophile.com/images/616BW802fig1.jpg
B&W 802 D3 Impedance Curve
I don't want to spend too much time on this, since it is a very expensive proposition, and the amount a  new amp can benefit the bass output of a system is just more than trivial.  Noticeable but not a major difference. In my humble experience, amplifiers are more susceptible to low speaker impedance ( < 4 Ohms) than the math leads us to believe. A dip in impedance in the 80-300 Hz range often occurs with speakers and some amps are going to be more susceptible to this than others. This B&W 802 chart from Stereophile is a great example of a tough speaker between around 100Hz to 1 kHz.

When auditioning amps, you want to look at a chart like this and see if you hear significant differences in the low impedance range, as well as whether or not you like the change. You might actually like a less beefy amp as it may give you a built-in loudness curve with this speaker.  That is, there's no right answer. A megawatt amp may not sound right or be appropriate for you, but if you feel you need more bass, in the region the speaker dips this could be a reason why.

Remember when listening for this to listen at your normal listening levels. If you normally are working in the office listening from a distance, listen at that level. Don't try to judge this feature based on maximum output. 

Room Treatment

The right room treatment can make 2-way speakers sound huge and eliminate the desire for a sub altogether. Even if you treat the room and still want a sub-woofer, you'll find the improvements in clarity, smoothness transparency and imaging completely worthwhile.  To many audiophiles, the amount of improvement in bass performance room treatment brings to the table be shocking when first heard.

Treatments come in two flavors, so lets talk about them separately. I want to emphasize, as a committed apartment dweller, you can get treatment that work great in an apartment. Mine have outlived every other piece of gear I own. 


Listening Room Acoustics
GIK Acoustics

Panels

Panels on the walls and ceiling are a combination of diffusion and absorption that are mainly effective in the mid to treble range.  But wait, you are trying to fix a bass problem right? Well, what if the problem is not too little bass, but too much midrange or treble?  A live room will sound much brighter.  Reduce that and, like magic, the bass appears like a Spanish galleon emerging from the ocean at low tide.

If you are willing to spend thousands of dollars and countless hours buying a new sub or new speakers and setting them up, I highly encourage you to treat the room as best you can first. The best most cost effective way I know of right now is to ask GIK Acoustics for advice. Their panels are very effective and far below the cost of millionaire installer equipment from other brands. 

Bass Traps

Also available from sources like GIK, bass absorb bass but more importantly de-energize room modes, which not only makes speakers sound better but if you use an EQ either via Roon, miniDSP or via room correction systems the bass traps will greatly enhance their efficacy and even allow you to treat nulls which an EQ alone could not.

I don't know why but GIK doesn't promote their soffit traps very much, I find them ideal for an apartment as I can stack 2 of them in a corner and they work really well. 

But I Still Want a Subwoofer!

That's fine, get one. I own a Hsu VTF-15 which I use with six panels, two bass traps and a miniDSP unit and it's amazing, but if you get a sub treat the room first anyway. It will help the sub perform better and you'll have lots of other audiophile benefits.  Next, consider the setup effort. A subwoofer has to integrate with your main speakers as well as the room.  This means the following settings must be configured:

  • The crossover points 
  • Delay / phase 
  • Exaggerated room modes must be clipped via EQ
  •  If you have room treatment, or other null eliminating items like open layouts you may be able to fill in nulls as well.
So, before you buy, ask yourself how you will do this. Dirac and other room-correction systems will do this all automatically as will some new subwoofers. If you have time and desire to learn to do this manually, I suggest you search the Room EQ Wizard forums since it is a popular tool used to configure DSP equalizers. I don't use it so please don't ask me for help, I use OmniMic and am very happy with it.  Neither of these is a push button subwoofer configuration tool though.

For another take on this subject you might want to look at this article: 


What About Two Subwoofers?

This is a great idea, especially in larger listening rooms if you can place them optimally they can cancel out room modes.  Note that optimal placement takes time and effort and it usually means asymmetrical locations.

What About small Subwoofers?


The myth is that subwoofers with small diameter's are "faster." This is a myth.  Large diameters, powerful motor structures and big amps are what you want for bass, but!! Small subwoofers may excite the lowest room modes less due to their limited bass output. In this sense, for many listeners small subwoofers may sound better and be easier to integrate into a room.

So, yes, the idea of using a small subwoofer in a room is something to consider if you don't have enough room treatment, EQ, placement options, but it is still technically a myth that the drivers are faster or lower distortion. 

What about the Distributed Bass Array

To oversimplify, the DBA or  Audio Kinesis Swarm uses four subwoofers to cancel room modes. Please read details directly from the vendor as I am not a fan and therefore won't do it justice.

While I was a fan of this idea due to the innovation and possibilities it offered I never really warmed to it due to the physical complexity.  For me, I want my system simpler, smaller, and tripling the number of speakers in my home has no appeal at all. I am no longer a fan of this idea due to the fan boys and how cultish they have become. 

While the vendor's promotion online has been fair and honest the fan boys of this system are out of control.  From reading their posts and their attacks of the ideas posted above it is clear to me the fan boys have never heard a well integrated single sub so their opinion of any other ideas is at least misinformed if not down right deceptive.  At least one account seems to have been created specifically to show up and misquote Floyd Toole's writing to me.  You will notice the DBA cult because of the insistence that the DBA and only the DBA can solve all things bass in a room. This is how cults work.  They say "you have a problem (maybe you did not know you had this problem) and only our idea/savior/politician can save you."

Summary

  • Treat the room if you can and only when done there look around and see if you want a sub
  • Consider tone controls and equalizers as cost effective alternatives, even if you can't treat the room.
  • Consider the amp/speaker combination, but beware the cost and limited improvements possible.
  • If you still want to get a subwoofer, look at the alternatives and consider the integration effort as more important than the "quality" of a subwoofer.  How exactly are you going to be done setting it up? What good is a megabuck sub if you are only going to set it up half-way?
  • If the DBA seems like the easiest and most convenient way for you go and you have the space for it go ahead. 

Financial Disclaimer

Before anyone asks I have no financial interests in anything related to audio equipment or acoustics.  Whether you buy the brands I suggest above or find better one's I have no financial personal interest, direct or indirect.

7 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  2. So I have read both articles you referenced on Audiogon. I am like a horse that can smell water but not quite see it yet. How do I know where to place room treatments? How do I know what I need, how big or what size? I will be using two subs to make my B&Ws full range. With my Parasound integrated and the REL subs it is supposed to make integration a snap. The integrated is pretty nifty as I can hook subs up to do double duty as stereo and HT. I have a lot to learn on REW to know what I am looking at and looking for. I enjoy your post!

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    1. Talk to pros like ATS Acoustics or GIK Acoustics

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  3. Really good write up Nigel. Thank you. I agree with so much of this, and have learnt from the rest.

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  4. I am new into buying subwoofers so I really need your help in selecting the right one.

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  5. Hi Nigel~ I am glad you mentioned speaker placement as the first possible solution because that's basically how I fixed the weak bass in my system. I simply undid the tip-toeing so the speakers fire straight, and then reduced the distance between the speakers and like magic, the bass was full and alive. Is that just a special situation with my room or a commonly suggested solution?

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    1. Speaker placement is always something that needs to be done well, not just with your room. There are often misunderstandings however about toe-in and listener height. Some speakers, like Focals, tend to like little to no toe-in, and B&W's tend to prefer the mid-woofer axis for height.

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