Yes, thanks Dinyaar but in the pursuit of more and better now I wish for clarity in bass definition. Please suggest with your wisdom.
This is a very broad question, and let me see if we can discuss this to bring some clarity.
What one likes in bass has a lot to do with age and one's preferences. When you are young, you like 'enhanced' bass heard at very high amplitudes. As you start aging, you tend to lower the amplitude and start looking for accuracy in the low frequencies.
Again, this falls into two categories. One for movies and one for music.
With reference to music, I have explained this many times before, but no music in it's natural form contains bass lower than 40Hz. So if you are hearing frequencies lower than that - you are either enhancing the low frequencies with your equipment, or the frequencies have been lowered artificially in the studio during recording. But is that what you want to hear? As I said this depends upon the individual. If you like deep, strong, and boomy bass, you would use equipment and a 2.1 system that gives you artificially enhanced bass.
In movies, bass can go lower as they record a number of non-percussion sounds such as explosions, gun shots, crashes etc. Even percussions sounds are sometimes created artificially and these have lower frequencies than natural percussion instruments. These are recreated in your system by the Point 1.
A good woofer is one that can obviously create a low frequency - as low as possible. But more important is the speed of the woofer. How quickly does it kill the decay? Many woofers are designed to carry the sound for a few milliseconds and even create an echo. Many people like this.
Cheers