elangoas
Well-Known Member
After reading some articles on sub-woofers, 2 sub-woofers seem to do a better job in a room (HT).. 4 subs seems to ideal, but 2 is what looks feasible in my room..
Also reading up on room boundaries, Low Freq (<150Hz) seem to pose more challenges than the High Freq in a living room. (Few technical terms are difficult to comprehend)
This has got me thinking if 2 sub-woofers are used in a room, then a satellite speakers {2-way/3-way} should do a better job than Floor-stander/Bookshelf w.r.t room boundaries..
In this scenario, if one is using an AVR for stereo and set the crossover say 150Hz and satellites are mounted on the wall (to reduce the room boundary issue), will this have any benefit to the user? And a Digital room correction feature that most AVR's have today, if applied, is it beneficial for stereo?
Appreciate your insights on the same..
Also reading up on room boundaries, Low Freq (<150Hz) seem to pose more challenges than the High Freq in a living room. (Few technical terms are difficult to comprehend)
This has got me thinking if 2 sub-woofers are used in a room, then a satellite speakers {2-way/3-way} should do a better job than Floor-stander/Bookshelf w.r.t room boundaries..
In this scenario, if one is using an AVR for stereo and set the crossover say 150Hz and satellites are mounted on the wall (to reduce the room boundary issue), will this have any benefit to the user? And a Digital room correction feature that most AVR's have today, if applied, is it beneficial for stereo?
Appreciate your insights on the same..