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"Margaret von B." wrote:
"Howard Ferstler" wrote in message ... I doubt if you can surpass the extremely clean bass performance of that F1800RII of mine, right down to 20 Hz. I have compared it to some sensational stuff, and while the musical performance of some of them matched the servo, with test tones the Velodyne always came out ahead, if only slightly at times. Actually, my modified (by me) SVS 16-46 can generate wall-rattling (and clean) sound right down to 17 Hz. I don't have the model you have, but I have a HGS (?) - 18 outdoors in my loggia/pool area that we could drag in (120 lbs ?) for comparison. :-) In its present location, Hsu need not apply... I am not sure what those question marks mean, but the first HGS-18 was similar in design to the F1800RII. The HGS version had a different cone and a different (probably more durable) surround, and it also had a more powerful amp. (I am not sure what the later HGS-18 Series 2 had, but the latest Digital Drive, DD-18 version incorporates a built-in parametric equalizer.) The amp power increase was unimportant, because the servo would not let the sub play significantly louder than the lower-powered F1800 version. The bigger amp was just part of a "more horsepower" PR campaign, probably against Sunfire. I reviewed an HGS-15 a while back and did a close AB comparison between it and the F1800. With either test tones or music there was no difference up to fairly high levels. I also compared the F1800 to the FSR-12, which is also a servo unit, but with an older-design driver, and they sounded the same. An HGS-12 I also reviewed was in the same performance league, at least up to its max-output point. OK, I also did comparisons between the Hsu TN1220 and the SVS 20-39 Ultra and found them to be essentially equal performers down to 20 Hz. Below that, both were bettered by my own extensively modified SVS 16-46 unit. (A beta-tested, mega-driver and some enclosure modifications that I documented in a TSS article a while back.) Against the F1800RII, those subs fell a tad behind with test-tone inputs, but only at really high levels. As far as smooth output is concerned, all three of the unmodified units had similar extension, with my modified 16-46 outpointing them all below 20 Hz and down to 17 Hz. (I consider this to be an insignificant advantage.) A Hsu VTF-3 I reviewed a while back was in the same category as these other subs at moderate levels, but it did exhibit more port noise than I would like at higher levels. It was the equal of the unmodified SVS 16-46 before I worked the latter unit over, however. In a direct face off between that $1300 FSR-12 Velodyne and a $500 Hsu VTF-2 I reviewed a while back, they were equal at reasonable levels even with test tones down to 25 Hz, with the Velodyne pulling ahead below that frequency. The Hsu did not distort significantly, but its output fell off below 25 Hz. The Velodyne's did not. Recently, I reviewed a Hsu $300 STF-1 sub for TSS (his smallest model) and it held its own against the VTF-2 down to 30 Hz. I will assume that it could hold its own down to that frequency against any of the other subs I have discussed, at least up to reasonable output levels. Actually, the little Hsu sub has mopped up the floor with several $500-$600 class subs I have been fooling with lately. The fact is that you can get killer bass response these days from subs that cost less than a grand or maybe a tad more. Yes, the Velodynes are very nice and they do have audibly cleaner outputs at fairly high levels with test tones. But with music this is nearly always just no big deal. Guys like you (and maybe even me) will want the Velodyne edge, just because it is nice to know that the reproduction is so clean, but we could get along just a well with subs that cost considerably less. I will admit that the DD Velodynes do have those built-in equalizers, and those could be of use. Ironically, the SVS 20-39 Ultra sub I reviewed a while back for TSS also had a parametric equalizer built in, although it was only a single-band job. Properly used, such equalization can come in handy. I rated the SVS highly because of this, although if you have an outboard equalizer that can also handle a sub (I have a Rane THX-44), the need for one attached to the sub is eliminated. Howard Ferstler |
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