View Full Version : I can feel it but I can’t hear it!!!!
bkuttemplon
09-25-2002, 11:42 AM
Hi
I was hearing a movie, I don’t remember the title, maybe Monsters Inc. Anyway it doesn’t matter. The point is that I didn’t hear much low sounds but all my room and the couch where vibrating as a jelly. What does it means? The sub’s crossover is set very low? The placing of the sub is not the appropriate?
Thank you!!
Best regards
hoosier21
09-25-2002, 02:28 PM
what subwoofer do you have? how is it hooked up?
Tell us more about the missing sound, does it happen all the time?
Maybe the part you are talking about was only to be felt not heard?
bkuttemplon
09-25-2002, 03:03 PM
Thank you Hoosier
The mains are Cerwin Vega RE-25 set to Large (center and surround sets to small); bass management is set to both (mains and sub). The sub is a PSW-450 connected thru LFE out (90 Hz) to both Line Level Inputs using a Y. The crossover knob points a little less than 90 Hz. The volume knob points to the middle. What else… room size is around 9.8 x 13.12
This happens must of the time but just in movies, for music I don’t have this problem. The fact is that in music I have a lack of bass and volume, even when I use an equalizer
Best regards.
hoosier21
09-25-2002, 04:02 PM
One thing I see is you are "double filtering" the signal to the subwoofer. Turn the subwoofer crossover dial up all the way, this should help some. What is happening is the receiver and the subwoofer crossovers are both "removing" part of the signal. The receiver is already doing all the work in that deptment, so if you turn the subwoofers variable crossover dial as high as it will go(like to 125 on your sub) this will remove the "second" crossover filter at the 80hz range.
RuSsMaN
09-25-2002, 04:13 PM
Try switching the phase on the sub also.....
Cheers,
Russ
trubluluc
09-25-2002, 04:37 PM
Try ditching the Y and just connect the LFE out of your receiver into the LFE In(unfiltered) on your
sub.
I have a couple 450's, they are capabable of producing decent bass.
-Luc
hoosier21
09-25-2002, 04:43 PM
should have said that but I have never seen the 450 and did not know it had an LFE in. reading some of the Polk subwoofer manuals online, no wonder people have a hard time hooking them up.
Dr. Spec
09-25-2002, 05:24 PM
My $0.02:
Set ALL (I know, I know, it can be emotionally difficult with large mains) your speakers to small, set your sub to on, and connect ONE sub cable from the sub out to the LFE (unfiltered) in jack. If the mains and the sub are on the same wall, set the phase to 0 degrees. If they are on opposite walls, try 180 degrees. One will give better bass than the other, regardless.
That should give you decent bass response. Let us know what happens...........the PSW450 is a pretty powerful sub and you should be pounding away in that small room. Sometimes moving the sub to different locations helps a bunch.
Doc
bkuttemplon
09-25-2002, 06:17 PM
Thank you everyone for your replies!!!
I’m not sure if I’m double filtering (or maybe just a little). Please correct me if I’m wrong
Here is my theory:
- The amplifier’s LFE sends frequencies below 90 Hz
- The middle point of the sub’s crossover is 90 Hz
If I turn the crossover knob to the left I’ll get a lower frequency, then double filtering happens, right? But if I turn the sub’s knob to the right nothing happens because the amplifier already filters frequencies above 90 Hz, right?
That means that for this case, the crossover only “works” for frequencies below 90 Hz. Does it makes you sence?
Am I living in a mistake?
Best regards
scottvamp
09-25-2002, 07:46 PM
I see what you are saying and it makes sence. As long as the sub. is 90hz and above there should be no "double filtering". What some people seem to think is that you are filtering 90hz twice which would give say a 45hz freq. or 0hz???? And that can not be realistic. IMO
Dr. Spec
09-25-2002, 09:55 PM
The crossover point is not a brick wall - it is a slope off with probably 12 or 24 dB per octave. Keeping both at 90 is pushing your luck - there probably is still some double filtering going on, but your basic understanding of the concept is sound.
Regardless, DEEP SIX the L/R filtered low level inputs and connect ONE CABLE to the unfiltered LFE input. Set ALL your speakers to small, your sub to on. Keep your individual sub volume at the receiver at 0 dB or a bit lower.
Get a sound meter and calibrate with the receiver's test tones. See my post under Speakers for the PC+ for a detailed description of how to do this.
Doc
RuSsMaN
09-25-2002, 09:59 PM
His mains have a 10" woof, I'm thinking Large....
Cheers,
Russ
nascarmann
09-25-2002, 10:36 PM
I don't know why everyone wants to set there speakers to small? If you have large speakers (RT55 or bigger) set them to large and sub "yes or on". Everyone talks about the bass in the DVD's they just watched, well let all the speakers help with this bass, not just the sub....
IMO of course....;)
danger boy
09-26-2002, 02:23 AM
Originally posted by trubluluc
Try ditching the Y and just connect the LFE out of your receiver into the LFE In(unfiltered) on your
sub.
I have a couple 450's, they are capabable of producing decent bass.
-Luc
EXACTLY! why are you using a Y connector for one sub? bass is mono as far as I know. even if you were running two subs.. it would still be mono signal.
danger boy
09-26-2002, 02:31 AM
okay here is my two cents. strange as it may be.. but it's not a problem.. just FYI. I have all my speakers (800i's, CS400, and FX/300i's) set to small. most of the low bass is sent to the PSW350 sub. cool. no problem when in DD.
BUT when i switch the mains to "large" in DTS it cuts out the sub.. and the bass is routed to the fronts. not a problem... just kinda strange if you ask me.
I like many of you.. experiment with the small, and large setting to tweak our respective systems to sound the way we like them to.
Dr. Spec
09-26-2002, 06:32 AM
Russ and Nascarmann have a point about the 10" mains. They probably CAN handle their share of the bass. I was more concerned with phase issues and wanted to sort that out first.
Danger, that is not conventional bass management. Sub on and mains to large should send the LFE only to the sub and a full range signal to the mains.
Doc
shack
09-26-2002, 10:04 AM
why are you using a Y connector for one sub? bass is mono as far as I know. even if you were running two subs.. it would still be mono signal.
I tried several different setups for my sub. LFE single input, line level from speaker inputs and then out to the mains, running a single cable from each of the L and R pre-outs of my reciever to the L and R input of the sub. I finally ended up with a "Y" adapter from my LFE and sending it to the subs L and R input. I got the idea from Adire Audio. I was considering the Rava subwoofer and had downloaded the manual. Here is the excerpt from the manual:
"NOTE: If your LFE output is a single channel then you only need one cable from the LFE output to the Rava. You can use either low level input: left is used by convention. Additionally, if you need additional gain on the LFE channel , a simple "Y" jack to run the LFE input to both the left and right channels will give you a "free" 6dB of gain.
Rava Owner's Guide"
This setup worked very well for me.
Dr. Spec
09-26-2002, 01:14 PM
No one is disputing that Y-splitting the signal doubles the voltage gain from the receiver's LFE pre-out. The problem is the potential for double filtering if you are connecting to the filtered L/R low level inputs. I'm not saying double filtering WILL occur everytime the L/R low level inouts are used, I'm saying it COULD occur if the user wasn't careful about speaker set-up and bass management and where to set the sub's x-over, etc. The potential for this bugaboo is eliminated completely if you connect only to the unfiltered LFE input at the sub and do all your bass management at the receiver.
Typically, the plate amps used in most powered subs have no voltage or impedance mismatches with the LFE signal sent by nearly all HT receivers. Splitting the LFE signal and connecting two cables to the sub will indeed add volume at the sub, but this could also be identically accomplished by simply doubling the sub volume control at the receiver.
Some external touring amps used by non-powered sub owners DO occasionally have a mismatch with LFE output from the receiver, and require a boost in signal gain in order to work properly. Symptoms here would be poor SPL from the sub, even with the receiver's sub volume at +10 and the sub amp's gain control at max. This would be a scenario where you WOULD want to Y-split the LFE signal from the HT receiver, OR add an inline "bass box" (like from Marchand Electronics) with a signal gain feature.
If the sub volume control at the receiver goes from -10 to +10, the ideal setting would be somewhere between -5dB and 0dB. Going any lower gets you into some S/N ratio problems, and going any higher gives you signal compression (i.e., headroom and clipping) problems with the tiny LFE pre-out amp.
With the receiver sub volume somewhere between -5 and 0, adjust the gain at the sub to match the rest of the speakers. If you have an SPL meter on the C-weighted slow setting, get all of your speaks to play 75 dB on the test tones, and the sub to play 77-78 dB - all measured AT the listening position. That is a very good starting spot for proper calibration.
Doc
scottvamp
09-26-2002, 06:13 PM
Bottom Line in my experience - when I use the Y adapter on my subs I got more spl (louder volume) and better bass responce regardless of bass management. I am not sure of the "science" behind this. The sub's I have have a sub input (LFE in) and a left and right. There must be a reason for this. The standard specific Monster bass cables all came with the adapters (of high quality) . Dual voice coil and/or dual woofers may be one thoery. But it works for me.:)
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