imported_bum
Golden Member
- Jan 15, 2005
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Originally posted by: Howard
Please, if you have the spare time and have access to decent wood power tools, do yourself a favor and build something yourself [if you have to learn how, that can be fun too], even if it's just the sub. Your ears and wallet will thank you.Originally posted by: Howard
You any good at woodworking and/or soldering?
If you can build a good, sturdy box [at least 3/4" thick walls with internal bracing], build one with a 3 ft^3 to 4 ft^3 (the larger the better) internal volume, and drop in a Dayton RSS315HF-4 12" driver. Add some Dacron/Acousta-Stuff/fiberglass stuffing, hook it up to a 250W sub amp, and you've got yourself a $260 (plus shipping and box material cost) amp that'll hit a clean 100dB @ 20Hz in an open field, and at LEAST 115dB @ 20Hz in your room. Seriously beats the pants off anything I can think of, for that much.
If you take this route, it leaves at least $1100 for receiver and speakers, with a better sub than you'd otherwise have bought.
I've already modeled it and it does hit 99dB at 20Hz with 250W in open space (theoretically, of course, but you know it's give or take, not just take). Assuming 16' is the longest dimension of the room - which it seems to be - the frequency at which room pressurization occurs is 140Hz. Below that, room gain occurs at about 6db/octave. Meaning, +6dB at 70Hz, +12dB at 35Hz, +18dB at 17.5Hz.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
Please, if you have the spare time and have access to decent wood power tools, do yourself a favor and build something yourself [if you have to learn how, that can be fun too], even if it's just the sub. Your ears and wallet will thank you.Originally posted by: Howard
You any good at woodworking and/or soldering?
If you can build a good, sturdy box [at least 3/4" thick walls with internal bracing], build one with a 3 ft^3 to 4 ft^3 (the larger the better) internal volume, and drop in a Dayton RSS315HF-4 12" driver. Add some Dacron/Acousta-Stuff/fiberglass stuffing, hook it up to a 250W sub amp, and you've got yourself a $260 (plus shipping and box material cost) amp that'll hit a clean 100dB @ 20Hz in an open field, and at LEAST 115dB @ 20Hz in your room. Seriously beats the pants off anything I can think of, for that much.
If you take this route, it leaves at least $1100 for receiver and speakers, with a better sub than you'd otherwise have bought.
Hey, I am DIYer as well, but you might need to rethink your design (or at least your expectations). That particular driver, in a sealed design, will not hit 115dB @ 20Hz in room, no sir.
Originally posted by: Howard
I've already modeled it and it does hit 99dB at 20Hz with 250W in open space (theoretically, of course, but you know it's give or take, not just take). Assuming 16' is the longest dimension of the room - which it seems to be - the frequency at which room pressurization occurs is 140Hz. Below that, room gain occurs at about 6db/octave. Meaning, +6dB at 70Hz, +12dB at 35Hz, +18dB at 17.5Hz.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
Please, if you have the spare time and have access to decent wood power tools, do yourself a favor and build something yourself [if you have to learn how, that can be fun too], even if it's just the sub. Your ears and wallet will thank you.Originally posted by: Howard
You any good at woodworking and/or soldering?
If you can build a good, sturdy box [at least 3/4" thick walls with internal bracing], build one with a 3 ft^3 to 4 ft^3 (the larger the better) internal volume, and drop in a Dayton RSS315HF-4 12" driver. Add some Dacron/Acousta-Stuff/fiberglass stuffing, hook it up to a 250W sub amp, and you've got yourself a $260 (plus shipping and box material cost) amp that'll hit a clean 100dB @ 20Hz in an open field, and at LEAST 115dB @ 20Hz in your room. Seriously beats the pants off anything I can think of, for that much.
If you take this route, it leaves at least $1100 for receiver and speakers, with a better sub than you'd otherwise have bought.
Hey, I am DIYer as well, but you might need to rethink your design (or at least your expectations). That particular driver, in a sealed design, will not hit 115dB @ 20Hz in room, no sir.
Modeled transfer function:
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton12hf3pt5cuftsealed.gif
Modeled max SPL:
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton12hf3pt5cuftsealedmaxspl.gif
Dual sealed?Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
I've already modeled it and it does hit 99dB at 20Hz with 250W in open space (theoretically, of course, but you know it's give or take, not just take). Assuming 16' is the longest dimension of the room - which it seems to be - the frequency at which room pressurization occurs is 140Hz. Below that, room gain occurs at about 6db/octave. Meaning, +6dB at 70Hz, +12dB at 35Hz, +18dB at 17.5Hz.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
Please, if you have the spare time and have access to decent wood power tools, do yourself a favor and build something yourself [if you have to learn how, that can be fun too], even if it's just the sub. Your ears and wallet will thank you.Originally posted by: Howard
You any good at woodworking and/or soldering?
If you can build a good, sturdy box [at least 3/4" thick walls with internal bracing], build one with a 3 ft^3 to 4 ft^3 (the larger the better) internal volume, and drop in a Dayton RSS315HF-4 12" driver. Add some Dacron/Acousta-Stuff/fiberglass stuffing, hook it up to a 250W sub amp, and you've got yourself a $260 (plus shipping and box material cost) amp that'll hit a clean 100dB @ 20Hz in an open field, and at LEAST 115dB @ 20Hz in your room. Seriously beats the pants off anything I can think of, for that much.
If you take this route, it leaves at least $1100 for receiver and speakers, with a better sub than you'd otherwise have bought.
Hey, I am DIYer as well, but you might need to rethink your design (or at least your expectations). That particular driver, in a sealed design, will not hit 115dB @ 20Hz in room, no sir.
Modeled transfer function:
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton12hf3pt5cuftsealed.gif
Modeled max SPL:
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton12hf3pt5cuftsealedmaxspl.gif
I am familiar with room gain, and winisd. Modeling a sub, and building it are two different things however.
He should look at a ported or dual-sealed option...IMO.
Originally posted by: Howard
Dual sealed?Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
I've already modeled it and it does hit 99dB at 20Hz with 250W in open space (theoretically, of course, but you know it's give or take, not just take). Assuming 16' is the longest dimension of the room - which it seems to be - the frequency at which room pressurization occurs is 140Hz. Below that, room gain occurs at about 6db/octave. Meaning, +6dB at 70Hz, +12dB at 35Hz, +18dB at 17.5Hz.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
Please, if you have the spare time and have access to decent wood power tools, do yourself a favor and build something yourself [if you have to learn how, that can be fun too], even if it's just the sub. Your ears and wallet will thank you.Originally posted by: Howard
You any good at woodworking and/or soldering?
If you can build a good, sturdy box [at least 3/4" thick walls with internal bracing], build one with a 3 ft^3 to 4 ft^3 (the larger the better) internal volume, and drop in a Dayton RSS315HF-4 12" driver. Add some Dacron/Acousta-Stuff/fiberglass stuffing, hook it up to a 250W sub amp, and you've got yourself a $260 (plus shipping and box material cost) amp that'll hit a clean 100dB @ 20Hz in an open field, and at LEAST 115dB @ 20Hz in your room. Seriously beats the pants off anything I can think of, for that much.
If you take this route, it leaves at least $1100 for receiver and speakers, with a better sub than you'd otherwise have bought.
Hey, I am DIYer as well, but you might need to rethink your design (or at least your expectations). That particular driver, in a sealed design, will not hit 115dB @ 20Hz in room, no sir.
Modeled transfer function:
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton12hf3pt5cuftsealed.gif
Modeled max SPL:
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton12hf3pt5cuftsealedmaxspl.gif
I am familiar with room gain, and winisd. Modeling a sub, and building it are two different things however.
He should look at a ported or dual-sealed option...IMO.
I wouldn't recommend a ported box for his first endeavor into DIY audio.
Response gets evened out, and bass localization becomes much less of a problem (if one exists), but two enclosures means twice the work and almost twice the cost. I'm a little fuzzy on this, but if you power them in series (same power input) you end up with the same SPL, but in parallel you get +6dB? You would need an amp stable to 2 ohms in that case, though.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
Dual sealed?Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
I've already modeled it and it does hit 99dB at 20Hz with 250W in open space (theoretically, of course, but you know it's give or take, not just take). Assuming 16' is the longest dimension of the room - which it seems to be - the frequency at which room pressurization occurs is 140Hz. Below that, room gain occurs at about 6db/octave. Meaning, +6dB at 70Hz, +12dB at 35Hz, +18dB at 17.5Hz.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
Please, if you have the spare time and have access to decent wood power tools, do yourself a favor and build something yourself [if you have to learn how, that can be fun too], even if it's just the sub. Your ears and wallet will thank you.Originally posted by: Howard
You any good at woodworking and/or soldering?
If you can build a good, sturdy box [at least 3/4" thick walls with internal bracing], build one with a 3 ft^3 to 4 ft^3 (the larger the better) internal volume, and drop in a Dayton RSS315HF-4 12" driver. Add some Dacron/Acousta-Stuff/fiberglass stuffing, hook it up to a 250W sub amp, and you've got yourself a $260 (plus shipping and box material cost) amp that'll hit a clean 100dB @ 20Hz in an open field, and at LEAST 115dB @ 20Hz in your room. Seriously beats the pants off anything I can think of, for that much.
If you take this route, it leaves at least $1100 for receiver and speakers, with a better sub than you'd otherwise have bought.
Hey, I am DIYer as well, but you might need to rethink your design (or at least your expectations). That particular driver, in a sealed design, will not hit 115dB @ 20Hz in room, no sir.
Modeled transfer function:
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton12hf3pt5cuftsealed.gif
Modeled max SPL:
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton12hf3pt5cuftsealedmaxspl.gif
I am familiar with room gain, and winisd. Modeling a sub, and building it are two different things however.
He should look at a ported or dual-sealed option...IMO.
I wouldn't recommend a ported box for his first endeavor into DIY audio.
Yes, two sealed subs.
Not just that. With HT, it's important to have a rumble filter, especially seeing that some movies have ridiculous amounts of infrabass content. Not too difficult to add, but extra complexity nonetheless. More importantly, IMO, it's easier to get a flat response after room gain is included with a sealed sub than a ported sub. It's not too hard to get a [vented box's] response flat to ~20Hz with an F3 of 16Hz in free air, but you get a hump in-room because it's flat. Ideally, room gain "mirrors" the free air response (or vice versa) so that you end up with a flat response to an arbitrary frequency down below, 10Hz, 20Hz, 25Hz, whatever, and from what I've seen, sealed boxes more commonly exhibit this kind of behaviour.Why, because you think he might mess it up? Because sealed subs are easier to build effectively? (Yeah, there is a bit of truth to that).
Response gets evened out, and bass localization becomes much less of a problem (if one exists), but two enclosures means twice the work and twice the cost. I'm a little fuzzy on this, but if you power them in series (same power input) you end up with the same SPL, but in parallel you get +6dB? You would need an amp stable to 2 ohms in that case, though.Originally posted by: Howard
Yes, two sealed subs.
Not just that. With HT, it's important to have a rumble filter, especially seeing that some movies have ridiculous amounts of infrabass content. Not too difficult to add, but extra complexity nonetheless. More importantly, IMO, it's easier to get a flat response after room gain is included with a sealed sub than a ported sub. In free air, it's not too hard to get a [vented box's] response flat to ~20Hz with an F3 of 18Hz, but you get a hump because it's flat. Ideally, room gain "mirrors" the free air response so that you end up with a flat response to an arbitrary frequency down below, 10Hz, 20Hz, 25Hz, whatever, and from what I've seen, sealed boxes more commonly exhibit this kind of behaviour.Why, because you think he might mess it up? Because sealed subs are easier to build effectively? (Yeah, there is a bit of truth to that).
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Response gets evened out, and bass localization becomes much less of a problem (if one exists), but two enclosures means twice the work and twice the cost. I'm a little fuzzy on this, but if you power them in series (same power input) you end up with the same SPL, but in parallel you get +6dB? You would need an amp stable to 2 ohms in that case, though.Originally posted by: Howard
Yes, two sealed subs.
Not just that. With HT, it's important to have a rumble filter, especially seeing that some movies have ridiculous amounts of infrabass content. Not too difficult to add, but extra complexity nonetheless. More importantly, IMO, it's easier to get a flat response after room gain is included with a sealed sub than a ported sub. In free air, it's not too hard to get a [vented box's] response flat to ~20Hz with an F3 of 18Hz, but you get a hump because it's flat. Ideally, room gain "mirrors" the free air response so that you end up with a flat response to an arbitrary frequency down below, 10Hz, 20Hz, 25Hz, whatever, and from what I've seen, sealed boxes more commonly exhibit this kind of behaviour.Why, because you think he might mess it up? Because sealed subs are easier to build effectively? (Yeah, there is a bit of truth to that).
Sealed sub, modeled response:
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/attachment.php?postid=366440&stamp=1081327935
In-room response:
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/attachment.php?postid=366441&stamp=1081328162
Damn EQ, I keep forgetting about that. You're right; any good sub amp has a built-in rumble filter.Yes, yes, a high-pass filter so that the driver does not bottom out. This can be acheived quite easily (in fact, I believe that the PE plate amps have built in rumble filters). I am assuming that any diy sub would also be EQed properly. In such a case, acheiving a flat FR is not a problem.
Given the same F3, a vented box drops off faster than a sealed one does. Of course, that doesn't really help the case of the sealed sub if the same driver has an F3 of 16.5Hz when vented, as opposed to an F3 of 41Hz when sealed. But group delay goes massive...And most "standard" sealed subs of the type that you have modeled will not extend far below 20Hz with much authority.
Originally posted by: brunswickite
Originally posted by: Doggiedog
Go to AVS Forums.
They have some awesome powerbuys right now.
I just ordered a Samsung 56" HL-S 5687 for $2,495. This TV just came out and does 1080p. The 50" version is $2,195 on the powerbuy.
I've seen the 720p Samsungs for under $2,000.
If you want the link, send me a PM.
Text
This is the TV i am looking right now.
1500 shipped.
AFAIK, the lag won't happen if you don't let the TV upscale the input (leave the input at SD).Originally posted by: akubi
Originally posted by: brunswickite
Originally posted by: Doggiedog
Go to AVS Forums.
They have some awesome powerbuys right now.
I just ordered a Samsung 56" HL-S 5687 for $2,495. This TV just came out and does 1080p. The 50" version is $2,195 on the powerbuy.
I've seen the 720p Samsungs for under $2,000.
If you want the link, send me a PM.
Text
This is the TV i am looking right now.
1500 shipped.
don't get the HL-R's if you are gonna play consoles on it. they have a 1s video delay that really screws up gaming. Samsung made a special "gaming mode" for these dlps but even that still has .5s-ish video lag.
as always, do some research on the product you are looking at...
Originally posted by: brunswickite
Originally posted by: Doggiedog
Go to AVS Forums.
They have some awesome powerbuys right now.
I just ordered a Samsung 56" HL-S 5687 for $2,495. This TV just came out and does 1080p. The 50" version is $2,195 on the powerbuy.
I've seen the 720p Samsungs for under $2,000.
If you want the link, send me a PM.
Text
This is the TV i am looking right now.
1500 shipped.
Given the same F3, a vented box drops off faster than a sealed one does. Of course, that doesn't really help the case of the sealed sub if the same driver has an F3 of 16.5Hz when vented, as opposed to an F3 of 41Hz when sealed. But group delay goes massive...
Modeling (sealed 4ft^3 vs vented 6ft^3 tuned to 17Hz):
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedtransferfunc.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedmaxspl.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedgroupdelay.gif
Is the group delay audible? I don't know. It might be.
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton3pt4ft21hzventedGD.gifOriginally posted by: Excelsior
Given the same F3, a vented box drops off faster than a sealed one does. Of course, that doesn't really help the case of the sealed sub if the same driver has an F3 of 16.5Hz when vented, as opposed to an F3 of 41Hz when sealed. But group delay goes massive...
Modeling (sealed 4ft^3 vs vented 6ft^3 tuned to 17Hz):
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedtransferfunc.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedmaxspl.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedgroupdelay.gif
Is the group delay audible? I don't know. It might be.
I believe that the recommended design for this driver is 3.4 cuft, tuned to 21 Hz. This greatly reduces group delay.
Originally posted by: Howard
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton3pt4ft21hzventedGD.gifOriginally posted by: Excelsior
Given the same F3, a vented box drops off faster than a sealed one does. Of course, that doesn't really help the case of the sealed sub if the same driver has an F3 of 16.5Hz when vented, as opposed to an F3 of 41Hz when sealed. But group delay goes massive...
Modeling (sealed 4ft^3 vs vented 6ft^3 tuned to 17Hz):
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedtransferfunc.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedmaxspl.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedgroupdelay.gif
Is the group delay audible? I don't know. It might be.
I believe that the recommended design for this driver is 3.4 cuft, tuned to 21 Hz. This greatly reduces group delay.
Well, it's better. Output under 20Hz is worse, but I suppose you can't expect too much out of a 12".
If he was going for a pure music setup, I would have definitely recommended 2 x (2 x 15") 15" drivers in W-baffles for sweet musical stereo dipole bass bliss.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton3pt4ft21hzventedGD.gifOriginally posted by: Excelsior
Given the same F3, a vented box drops off faster than a sealed one does. Of course, that doesn't really help the case of the sealed sub if the same driver has an F3 of 16.5Hz when vented, as opposed to an F3 of 41Hz when sealed. But group delay goes massive...
Modeling (sealed 4ft^3 vs vented 6ft^3 tuned to 17Hz):
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedtransferfunc.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedmaxspl.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedgroupdelay.gif
Is the group delay audible? I don't know. It might be.
I believe that the recommended design for this driver is 3.4 cuft, tuned to 21 Hz. This greatly reduces group delay.
Well, it's better. Output under 20Hz is worse, but I suppose you can't expect too much out of a 12".
Aye. Seems to me that most DIYers (for HT use anyway) use 15 inchers.
Originally posted by: Howard
If he was going for a pure music setup, I would have definitely recommended 2 x (2 x 15") 15" drivers in W-baffles for sweet musical stereo dipole bass bliss.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton3pt4ft21hzventedGD.gifOriginally posted by: Excelsior
Given the same F3, a vented box drops off faster than a sealed one does. Of course, that doesn't really help the case of the sealed sub if the same driver has an F3 of 16.5Hz when vented, as opposed to an F3 of 41Hz when sealed. But group delay goes massive...
Modeling (sealed 4ft^3 vs vented 6ft^3 tuned to 17Hz):
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedtransferfunc.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedmaxspl.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedgroupdelay.gif
Is the group delay audible? I don't know. It might be.
I believe that the recommended design for this driver is 3.4 cuft, tuned to 21 Hz. This greatly reduces group delay.
Well, it's better. Output under 20Hz is worse, but I suppose you can't expect too much out of a 12".
Aye. Seems to me that most DIYers (for HT use anyway) use 15 inchers.
Well... music and HT are different animals. I would have put more money into the sub since for music you only need 2 speakers.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
If he was going for a pure music setup, I would have definitely recommended 2 x (2 x 15") 15" drivers in W-baffles for sweet musical stereo dipole bass bliss.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton3pt4ft21hzventedGD.gifOriginally posted by: Excelsior
Given the same F3, a vented box drops off faster than a sealed one does. Of course, that doesn't really help the case of the sealed sub if the same driver has an F3 of 16.5Hz when vented, as opposed to an F3 of 41Hz when sealed. But group delay goes massive...
Modeling (sealed 4ft^3 vs vented 6ft^3 tuned to 17Hz):
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedtransferfunc.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedmaxspl.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedgroupdelay.gif
Is the group delay audible? I don't know. It might be.
I believe that the recommended design for this driver is 3.4 cuft, tuned to 21 Hz. This greatly reduces group delay.
Well, it's better. Output under 20Hz is worse, but I suppose you can't expect too much out of a 12".
Aye. Seems to me that most DIYers (for HT use anyway) use 15 inchers.
Yet for a HT setup you recommended a single sealed 12".
Originally posted by: Howard
Well... music and HT are different animals. I would have put more money into the sub since for music you only need 2 speakers.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
If he was going for a pure music setup, I would have definitely recommended 2 x (2 x 15") 15" drivers in W-baffles for sweet musical stereo dipole bass bliss.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton3pt4ft21hzventedGD.gifOriginally posted by: Excelsior
Given the same F3, a vented box drops off faster than a sealed one does. Of course, that doesn't really help the case of the sealed sub if the same driver has an F3 of 16.5Hz when vented, as opposed to an F3 of 41Hz when sealed. But group delay goes massive...
Modeling (sealed 4ft^3 vs vented 6ft^3 tuned to 17Hz):
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedtransferfunc.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedmaxspl.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedgroupdelay.gif
Is the group delay audible? I don't know. It might be.
I believe that the recommended design for this driver is 3.4 cuft, tuned to 21 Hz. This greatly reduces group delay.
Well, it's better. Output under 20Hz is worse, but I suppose you can't expect too much out of a 12".
Aye. Seems to me that most DIYers (for HT use anyway) use 15 inchers.
Yet for a HT setup you recommended a single sealed 12".
Besides, I think he would be satisfied with the sealed 12".
I know, but dipole bass, though superior to monopole bass, cannot reproduce the same SPL. That's why it's much more suitable for music than for HT, and why I didn't recommend it initially.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
Well... music and HT are different animals. I would have put more money into the sub since for music you only need 2 speakers.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
If he was going for a pure music setup, I would have definitely recommended 2 x (2 x 15") 15" drivers in W-baffles for sweet musical stereo dipole bass bliss.Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: Howard
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/dayton3pt4ft21hzventedGD.gifOriginally posted by: Excelsior
Given the same F3, a vented box drops off faster than a sealed one does. Of course, that doesn't really help the case of the sealed sub if the same driver has an F3 of 16.5Hz when vented, as opposed to an F3 of 41Hz when sealed. But group delay goes massive...
Modeling (sealed 4ft^3 vs vented 6ft^3 tuned to 17Hz):
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedtransferfunc.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedmaxspl.gif
http://www.rootminus1.com/howard/pics/comparesealedvsventedgroupdelay.gif
Is the group delay audible? I don't know. It might be.
I believe that the recommended design for this driver is 3.4 cuft, tuned to 21 Hz. This greatly reduces group delay.
Well, it's better. Output under 20Hz is worse, but I suppose you can't expect too much out of a 12".
Aye. Seems to me that most DIYers (for HT use anyway) use 15 inchers.
Yet for a HT setup you recommended a single sealed 12".
Besides, I think he would be satisfied with the sealed 12".
Indeed they are, but in many cases, a single well designed sub can handle both duties quite admirably.
IMO, a HT sub is just as important as a music sub. If anything, it is more important since their is usually much deeper bass in movies than in music and action sequences, bass for dramatic effect and the such are very critical to the listening experience.
If only it were cheaper...A ported 15" sub using this driver would be most excellent for HT use (as well as for music).
Originally posted by: GINOinFL
You're going to run into problems trying to set up a "good" home theater setup for $1500, most people are recommending stuff that would send you quite a bit over your budget. I have some thoughts that you might want to consider.
You can get a pretty nice sub from www.partsexpress.com for around $150. These Dayton subs are a great value, and are highly rated. I have one and it is plenty for a small/medium room.
The total sound of a system is more dependent on the speakers that the receiver (there are many good receivers), so spend most of your money there. You shouldn't have to spend more than $500 to get a pretty nice receiver, prob $400. I got an HK AVR240 from Circuit City for $400 that I'm very pleased with. There are so many good inexpensive receivers out there that you could go crazy trying to pick out the best one.
The poster that mentioned AV123 was prob the best for speakers in your price range, IMHO. Also consider Athena speakers.