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#1
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I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions
regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? Thanks, and sorry for the long post. |
#2
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![]() "OodlesoFun" wrote in message .. . I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? Thanks, and sorry for the long post. The subwoofer crossover issue depends on the speakers. I would have to hear them to make a solid recommendation, but THX standard is 100hz. Depending on your receiver model it may have a subwoofer or LFE test tone. Use it to send a signal to the subwoofer. Adjust the gain with the knob on the back of the sub up until you begin to hear distortion. Once you do back it down a bit. From there adjust the level at the amp to your liking. Try to keep the opening of the sub at least 150% of the diameter of the opening away from the wall. You will probably get a lot of different opinions on theses topics. Good luck and have fun! |
#3
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![]() "OodlesoFun" wrote in message .. . I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? Thanks, and sorry for the long post. The subwoofer crossover issue depends on the speakers. I would have to hear them to make a solid recommendation, but THX standard is 100hz. Depending on your receiver model it may have a subwoofer or LFE test tone. Use it to send a signal to the subwoofer. Adjust the gain with the knob on the back of the sub up until you begin to hear distortion. Once you do back it down a bit. From there adjust the level at the amp to your liking. Try to keep the opening of the sub at least 150% of the diameter of the opening away from the wall. You will probably get a lot of different opinions on theses topics. Good luck and have fun! |
#4
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![]() "OodlesoFun" wrote in message .. . I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? Thanks, and sorry for the long post. The subwoofer crossover issue depends on the speakers. I would have to hear them to make a solid recommendation, but THX standard is 100hz. Depending on your receiver model it may have a subwoofer or LFE test tone. Use it to send a signal to the subwoofer. Adjust the gain with the knob on the back of the sub up until you begin to hear distortion. Once you do back it down a bit. From there adjust the level at the amp to your liking. Try to keep the opening of the sub at least 150% of the diameter of the opening away from the wall. You will probably get a lot of different opinions on theses topics. Good luck and have fun! |
#5
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![]() "OodlesoFun" wrote in message .. . I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? Thanks, and sorry for the long post. The subwoofer crossover issue depends on the speakers. I would have to hear them to make a solid recommendation, but THX standard is 100hz. Depending on your receiver model it may have a subwoofer or LFE test tone. Use it to send a signal to the subwoofer. Adjust the gain with the knob on the back of the sub up until you begin to hear distortion. Once you do back it down a bit. From there adjust the level at the amp to your liking. Try to keep the opening of the sub at least 150% of the diameter of the opening away from the wall. You will probably get a lot of different opinions on theses topics. Good luck and have fun! |
#6
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"OodlesoFun" wrote in message
I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? Yes, or maybe you could set the volume control on the woofer a little lower which might reduce any possible noise pickup. And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? The tube is called a "port" and should not be blocked. If the port is pointed at the wall, that side of the woofer should be several port diameters from the wall. If you can't do that, point the port in some other direction, but preferably not at the listener. |
#7
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"OodlesoFun" wrote in message
I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? Yes, or maybe you could set the volume control on the woofer a little lower which might reduce any possible noise pickup. And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? The tube is called a "port" and should not be blocked. If the port is pointed at the wall, that side of the woofer should be several port diameters from the wall. If you can't do that, point the port in some other direction, but preferably not at the listener. |
#8
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"OodlesoFun" wrote in message
I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? Yes, or maybe you could set the volume control on the woofer a little lower which might reduce any possible noise pickup. And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? The tube is called a "port" and should not be blocked. If the port is pointed at the wall, that side of the woofer should be several port diameters from the wall. If you can't do that, point the port in some other direction, but preferably not at the listener. |
#9
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"OodlesoFun" wrote in message
I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? Yes, or maybe you could set the volume control on the woofer a little lower which might reduce any possible noise pickup. And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? The tube is called a "port" and should not be blocked. If the port is pointed at the wall, that side of the woofer should be several port diameters from the wall. If you can't do that, point the port in some other direction, but preferably not at the listener. |
#10
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On Wed, 7 Jan 2004 06:56:53 -0600, "Chris"
wrote: The subwoofer crossover issue depends on the speakers. I would have to hear them to make a solid recommendation, but THX standard is 100hz. Actually, it's 80 Hz. Depending on your receiver model it may have a subwoofer or LFE test tone. Use it to send a signal to the subwoofer. Adjust the gain with the knob on the back of the sub up until you begin to hear distortion. Once you do back it down a bit. From there adjust the level at the amp to your liking. Try to keep the opening of the sub at least 150% of the diameter of the opening away from the wall. You will probably get a lot of different opinions on theses topics. Good luck and have fun! Yep, that all sounds fine. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#11
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On Wed, 7 Jan 2004 06:56:53 -0600, "Chris"
wrote: The subwoofer crossover issue depends on the speakers. I would have to hear them to make a solid recommendation, but THX standard is 100hz. Actually, it's 80 Hz. Depending on your receiver model it may have a subwoofer or LFE test tone. Use it to send a signal to the subwoofer. Adjust the gain with the knob on the back of the sub up until you begin to hear distortion. Once you do back it down a bit. From there adjust the level at the amp to your liking. Try to keep the opening of the sub at least 150% of the diameter of the opening away from the wall. You will probably get a lot of different opinions on theses topics. Good luck and have fun! Yep, that all sounds fine. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#12
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On Wed, 7 Jan 2004 06:56:53 -0600, "Chris"
wrote: The subwoofer crossover issue depends on the speakers. I would have to hear them to make a solid recommendation, but THX standard is 100hz. Actually, it's 80 Hz. Depending on your receiver model it may have a subwoofer or LFE test tone. Use it to send a signal to the subwoofer. Adjust the gain with the knob on the back of the sub up until you begin to hear distortion. Once you do back it down a bit. From there adjust the level at the amp to your liking. Try to keep the opening of the sub at least 150% of the diameter of the opening away from the wall. You will probably get a lot of different opinions on theses topics. Good luck and have fun! Yep, that all sounds fine. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#13
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On Wed, 7 Jan 2004 06:56:53 -0600, "Chris"
wrote: The subwoofer crossover issue depends on the speakers. I would have to hear them to make a solid recommendation, but THX standard is 100hz. Actually, it's 80 Hz. Depending on your receiver model it may have a subwoofer or LFE test tone. Use it to send a signal to the subwoofer. Adjust the gain with the knob on the back of the sub up until you begin to hear distortion. Once you do back it down a bit. From there adjust the level at the amp to your liking. Try to keep the opening of the sub at least 150% of the diameter of the opening away from the wall. You will probably get a lot of different opinions on theses topics. Good luck and have fun! Yep, that all sounds fine. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#14
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"OodlesoFun" wrote in message
.. . I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). First read my other post and the two linked articles. If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency. One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location. If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack. Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary. And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? Keep obstructions away from port. A distance equal to several port diameters is usually sufficient. Make sure at high volume you can't hear port noise from the listening position. |
#15
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"OodlesoFun" wrote in message
.. . I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). First read my other post and the two linked articles. If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency. One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location. If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack. Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary. And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? Keep obstructions away from port. A distance equal to several port diameters is usually sufficient. Make sure at high volume you can't hear port noise from the listening position. |
#16
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"OodlesoFun" wrote in message
.. . I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). First read my other post and the two linked articles. If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency. One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location. If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack. Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary. And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? Keep obstructions away from port. A distance equal to several port diameters is usually sufficient. Make sure at high volume you can't hear port noise from the listening position. |
#17
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"OodlesoFun" wrote in message
.. . I have a harmon/kardon satellite speaker system and have some questions regarding the subwoofer (powered, downfiring, only hookup option is from single RCA jack). First off, these are small satellites, so what should I make the crossover setting on the receiver? (100, 150, and 200 are the options) (the subwoofer itself has no such option, but I think it reads "60" somewhere on the back). First read my other post and the two linked articles. If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency. One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location. If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack. Also, the woofer has a volume(?) control knob on the back. But I can also control the subwoofer through the receiver. Is one set of controls better than the other? Could I just set the woofer's knob to half and adjust the bass via my receiver remote? I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary. And finally, the woofer has a hollow tube on the back panel. I have the subwoofer practically against the wall (not the best place, I know, but I'm cramped for space). Should I just turn the subwoofer around and allow that tube to face the front rather than against the wall? Keep obstructions away from port. A distance equal to several port diameters is usually sufficient. Make sure at high volume you can't hear port noise from the listening position. |
#18
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. See my other post and links. |
#19
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. See my other post and links. |
#20
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. See my other post and links. |
#21
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. See my other post and links. |
#22
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"Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. Thanks. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. That's an interesting claim. I'd like to see it supported. I've seen two general ways that the LFE channel is handled" (1) The LFE channel is sent to the subwoofer without actually being changed by any bass management. If any other speakers are set for "small", their bass content below the crossover frequency may be added to the LFE info in the subwoofer feed. This is pretty crude especially the ones where there is really no bass management. Approaches like these show up in some low-end implementations, including mid-end consumer PC sound cards. Basically, if you have no subwoofer, you hear no LFE information. If your LF & RF speakers lack bass, the LFE speaker may or may not be able to help you. (2) The LFE channel is distributed among all speakers depending on their properties and the crossover point settings. In no case is the LFE channel above the crossover setting sent anyplace but the subwoofer except of course if there is no subwoofer. If there is no subwoofer, the proper assignment for LFE channel signal above the crosover point would appear to be the center channel, subject to the settings for that speaker. However, below the crossover setting, the LFE channel's content is pooled and divided between the subwoofer (if present) and all other speakers that were identified as being "large*. This is a pretty high-quality implementation, and typical of mid fi consumer audio, and up. Let me elaborate. My main system which is used for both HT and music, has no subwoofer at all from the standpoint of surround processor bass management. My surround processor's subwoofer output receives no signal. A subwoofer is present, but it is part of the LF & RF subsystem. The RF & LF speakers are defined to the surround processor as being "large". An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. By all accounts and tests, the LFE channel is well-represented in the sound field in the listening room even though this system effectively has no LFE speaker. I note that my surround processor has no level controls for the subwoofer, but it does have a level control for the LFE channel. The LFE channel is obviously virtualized. I arrived at this setup experimentally, because my surround processor has only a single crossover frequency, and it is inappropriate for the speakers and the room. I think this indirectly contradicts the claim that: "For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency." My system has no LFE speaker whatsoever, and yet the LFE channel is well-represented in the room. Not only is the LFE represesented, but it is also clearly and logically imaged. See my other post and links. OK, let's do it. "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency." This is one of those "depends on" statements without some unstated dependencies. These days we have subwoofers with 10, 8 and even 6 inch drivers. These speakers can easily have relatively smooth response up to say 300 Hz, which is the highest "subwoofer" crossover frequency I can conceive of in a system with pretensions to sound quality. My point is that with a driver like this pointed at the listener and a decently-designed crossover, a dip due to the acoustic properties of the sub and satellite is unlikely for any reasonable crossover setting. More likely, the bass and perhaps even the mid-bass imaging will be upset. We can argue all day as to whether the ear hears directionality at 60 Hz, but by 150 Hz there's very little doubt. For example, the intention of the recordist might be that the bass come from either the LF or RF, but if the crossover is at 150 Hz and the subwoofer and LF & RF speakers aren't positioned very close to each other or if they are close but you are sitting close to them, you're going to hear a lot of that bass coming from the center. I call that bass imaging failure. "One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location." It's true that a sub that is distorting will generate output above the crossover frequency and therefore be easier to locate. However, you don't need to presume substandard equipment to explain why a high crossover frequency will simply allow the listener to localize sounds to the subwoofer because the crossover point is too high for the application. The ear localizes the sound source better and better as the signal frequency goes up from 60 to 80 Hz. One way to partially circumvent this is to put the subwoofer very close to the satellites and to put the satellites closer to each other. However, this approach to reducing bass imaging failure causes some bass imaging to be lost. "If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack." Good advice. I've seen this work many times. "I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary." Generally speaking, more good advice. However, it's non-specific about what the receiver's LFE channel control is called and what it actually controls. I frequently see a LFE control, not a subwoofer control. There's a big difference because the LFE is effectively an input to the bass management subsystem, while the subwoofer is an output from the bass management subsystem. No need to comment much on the remaining comment where we agree. For a counterpoint, I consider the following which showed up in my research: http://www.abluesky.com/m/p/bs10011b.pdf page 10: "The LFE Channel was originally designed for film applications as a way to extend the low frequency "head-room" (not frequency response) of the playback system. This additional headroom was created by adding +10dB of in-band gain to the LFE channel. This channel should only be used when no additional headroom is available in the other channels for low frequency effects. As an example, you may use the LFE channel to increase the dynamic low frequency content of a movie that has many large explosions. This is rarely the case in music, although there may be some creative reasons to use the LFE from time to time. It is important to note that no "significant" audio should be sent exclusively to the LFE channel. The reason for this is that if a Dolby Digital audio track is folded down to 2-channels, which can happen if a consumer doesn't have a surround system, the LFE channel will not be added to the fold-down mix (all other channels will be added to the fold-down)." The document I quoted relates to a dedicated bass management product for use in audio production. The manual seems to make interesting reading. Other similar tools: http://www.smr-home-theatre.org/surr...image_13.shtml http://pdf.outlawaudio.com/outlaw/docs/icbm_manual.pdf Also, various online audio-related discussion groups where various controversies related to these products have been logged. Google seemed to find a good selection of these with the search words: bass management controller . |
#23
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"Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. Thanks. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. That's an interesting claim. I'd like to see it supported. I've seen two general ways that the LFE channel is handled" (1) The LFE channel is sent to the subwoofer without actually being changed by any bass management. If any other speakers are set for "small", their bass content below the crossover frequency may be added to the LFE info in the subwoofer feed. This is pretty crude especially the ones where there is really no bass management. Approaches like these show up in some low-end implementations, including mid-end consumer PC sound cards. Basically, if you have no subwoofer, you hear no LFE information. If your LF & RF speakers lack bass, the LFE speaker may or may not be able to help you. (2) The LFE channel is distributed among all speakers depending on their properties and the crossover point settings. In no case is the LFE channel above the crossover setting sent anyplace but the subwoofer except of course if there is no subwoofer. If there is no subwoofer, the proper assignment for LFE channel signal above the crosover point would appear to be the center channel, subject to the settings for that speaker. However, below the crossover setting, the LFE channel's content is pooled and divided between the subwoofer (if present) and all other speakers that were identified as being "large*. This is a pretty high-quality implementation, and typical of mid fi consumer audio, and up. Let me elaborate. My main system which is used for both HT and music, has no subwoofer at all from the standpoint of surround processor bass management. My surround processor's subwoofer output receives no signal. A subwoofer is present, but it is part of the LF & RF subsystem. The RF & LF speakers are defined to the surround processor as being "large". An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. By all accounts and tests, the LFE channel is well-represented in the sound field in the listening room even though this system effectively has no LFE speaker. I note that my surround processor has no level controls for the subwoofer, but it does have a level control for the LFE channel. The LFE channel is obviously virtualized. I arrived at this setup experimentally, because my surround processor has only a single crossover frequency, and it is inappropriate for the speakers and the room. I think this indirectly contradicts the claim that: "For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency." My system has no LFE speaker whatsoever, and yet the LFE channel is well-represented in the room. Not only is the LFE represesented, but it is also clearly and logically imaged. See my other post and links. OK, let's do it. "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency." This is one of those "depends on" statements without some unstated dependencies. These days we have subwoofers with 10, 8 and even 6 inch drivers. These speakers can easily have relatively smooth response up to say 300 Hz, which is the highest "subwoofer" crossover frequency I can conceive of in a system with pretensions to sound quality. My point is that with a driver like this pointed at the listener and a decently-designed crossover, a dip due to the acoustic properties of the sub and satellite is unlikely for any reasonable crossover setting. More likely, the bass and perhaps even the mid-bass imaging will be upset. We can argue all day as to whether the ear hears directionality at 60 Hz, but by 150 Hz there's very little doubt. For example, the intention of the recordist might be that the bass come from either the LF or RF, but if the crossover is at 150 Hz and the subwoofer and LF & RF speakers aren't positioned very close to each other or if they are close but you are sitting close to them, you're going to hear a lot of that bass coming from the center. I call that bass imaging failure. "One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location." It's true that a sub that is distorting will generate output above the crossover frequency and therefore be easier to locate. However, you don't need to presume substandard equipment to explain why a high crossover frequency will simply allow the listener to localize sounds to the subwoofer because the crossover point is too high for the application. The ear localizes the sound source better and better as the signal frequency goes up from 60 to 80 Hz. One way to partially circumvent this is to put the subwoofer very close to the satellites and to put the satellites closer to each other. However, this approach to reducing bass imaging failure causes some bass imaging to be lost. "If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack." Good advice. I've seen this work many times. "I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary." Generally speaking, more good advice. However, it's non-specific about what the receiver's LFE channel control is called and what it actually controls. I frequently see a LFE control, not a subwoofer control. There's a big difference because the LFE is effectively an input to the bass management subsystem, while the subwoofer is an output from the bass management subsystem. No need to comment much on the remaining comment where we agree. For a counterpoint, I consider the following which showed up in my research: http://www.abluesky.com/m/p/bs10011b.pdf page 10: "The LFE Channel was originally designed for film applications as a way to extend the low frequency "head-room" (not frequency response) of the playback system. This additional headroom was created by adding +10dB of in-band gain to the LFE channel. This channel should only be used when no additional headroom is available in the other channels for low frequency effects. As an example, you may use the LFE channel to increase the dynamic low frequency content of a movie that has many large explosions. This is rarely the case in music, although there may be some creative reasons to use the LFE from time to time. It is important to note that no "significant" audio should be sent exclusively to the LFE channel. The reason for this is that if a Dolby Digital audio track is folded down to 2-channels, which can happen if a consumer doesn't have a surround system, the LFE channel will not be added to the fold-down mix (all other channels will be added to the fold-down)." The document I quoted relates to a dedicated bass management product for use in audio production. The manual seems to make interesting reading. Other similar tools: http://www.smr-home-theatre.org/surr...image_13.shtml http://pdf.outlawaudio.com/outlaw/docs/icbm_manual.pdf Also, various online audio-related discussion groups where various controversies related to these products have been logged. Google seemed to find a good selection of these with the search words: bass management controller . |
#24
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"Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. Thanks. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. That's an interesting claim. I'd like to see it supported. I've seen two general ways that the LFE channel is handled" (1) The LFE channel is sent to the subwoofer without actually being changed by any bass management. If any other speakers are set for "small", their bass content below the crossover frequency may be added to the LFE info in the subwoofer feed. This is pretty crude especially the ones where there is really no bass management. Approaches like these show up in some low-end implementations, including mid-end consumer PC sound cards. Basically, if you have no subwoofer, you hear no LFE information. If your LF & RF speakers lack bass, the LFE speaker may or may not be able to help you. (2) The LFE channel is distributed among all speakers depending on their properties and the crossover point settings. In no case is the LFE channel above the crossover setting sent anyplace but the subwoofer except of course if there is no subwoofer. If there is no subwoofer, the proper assignment for LFE channel signal above the crosover point would appear to be the center channel, subject to the settings for that speaker. However, below the crossover setting, the LFE channel's content is pooled and divided between the subwoofer (if present) and all other speakers that were identified as being "large*. This is a pretty high-quality implementation, and typical of mid fi consumer audio, and up. Let me elaborate. My main system which is used for both HT and music, has no subwoofer at all from the standpoint of surround processor bass management. My surround processor's subwoofer output receives no signal. A subwoofer is present, but it is part of the LF & RF subsystem. The RF & LF speakers are defined to the surround processor as being "large". An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. By all accounts and tests, the LFE channel is well-represented in the sound field in the listening room even though this system effectively has no LFE speaker. I note that my surround processor has no level controls for the subwoofer, but it does have a level control for the LFE channel. The LFE channel is obviously virtualized. I arrived at this setup experimentally, because my surround processor has only a single crossover frequency, and it is inappropriate for the speakers and the room. I think this indirectly contradicts the claim that: "For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency." My system has no LFE speaker whatsoever, and yet the LFE channel is well-represented in the room. Not only is the LFE represesented, but it is also clearly and logically imaged. See my other post and links. OK, let's do it. "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency." This is one of those "depends on" statements without some unstated dependencies. These days we have subwoofers with 10, 8 and even 6 inch drivers. These speakers can easily have relatively smooth response up to say 300 Hz, which is the highest "subwoofer" crossover frequency I can conceive of in a system with pretensions to sound quality. My point is that with a driver like this pointed at the listener and a decently-designed crossover, a dip due to the acoustic properties of the sub and satellite is unlikely for any reasonable crossover setting. More likely, the bass and perhaps even the mid-bass imaging will be upset. We can argue all day as to whether the ear hears directionality at 60 Hz, but by 150 Hz there's very little doubt. For example, the intention of the recordist might be that the bass come from either the LF or RF, but if the crossover is at 150 Hz and the subwoofer and LF & RF speakers aren't positioned very close to each other or if they are close but you are sitting close to them, you're going to hear a lot of that bass coming from the center. I call that bass imaging failure. "One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location." It's true that a sub that is distorting will generate output above the crossover frequency and therefore be easier to locate. However, you don't need to presume substandard equipment to explain why a high crossover frequency will simply allow the listener to localize sounds to the subwoofer because the crossover point is too high for the application. The ear localizes the sound source better and better as the signal frequency goes up from 60 to 80 Hz. One way to partially circumvent this is to put the subwoofer very close to the satellites and to put the satellites closer to each other. However, this approach to reducing bass imaging failure causes some bass imaging to be lost. "If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack." Good advice. I've seen this work many times. "I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary." Generally speaking, more good advice. However, it's non-specific about what the receiver's LFE channel control is called and what it actually controls. I frequently see a LFE control, not a subwoofer control. There's a big difference because the LFE is effectively an input to the bass management subsystem, while the subwoofer is an output from the bass management subsystem. No need to comment much on the remaining comment where we agree. For a counterpoint, I consider the following which showed up in my research: http://www.abluesky.com/m/p/bs10011b.pdf page 10: "The LFE Channel was originally designed for film applications as a way to extend the low frequency "head-room" (not frequency response) of the playback system. This additional headroom was created by adding +10dB of in-band gain to the LFE channel. This channel should only be used when no additional headroom is available in the other channels for low frequency effects. As an example, you may use the LFE channel to increase the dynamic low frequency content of a movie that has many large explosions. This is rarely the case in music, although there may be some creative reasons to use the LFE from time to time. It is important to note that no "significant" audio should be sent exclusively to the LFE channel. The reason for this is that if a Dolby Digital audio track is folded down to 2-channels, which can happen if a consumer doesn't have a surround system, the LFE channel will not be added to the fold-down mix (all other channels will be added to the fold-down)." The document I quoted relates to a dedicated bass management product for use in audio production. The manual seems to make interesting reading. Other similar tools: http://www.smr-home-theatre.org/surr...image_13.shtml http://pdf.outlawaudio.com/outlaw/docs/icbm_manual.pdf Also, various online audio-related discussion groups where various controversies related to these products have been logged. Google seemed to find a good selection of these with the search words: bass management controller . |
#25
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"Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. Thanks. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. That's an interesting claim. I'd like to see it supported. I've seen two general ways that the LFE channel is handled" (1) The LFE channel is sent to the subwoofer without actually being changed by any bass management. If any other speakers are set for "small", their bass content below the crossover frequency may be added to the LFE info in the subwoofer feed. This is pretty crude especially the ones where there is really no bass management. Approaches like these show up in some low-end implementations, including mid-end consumer PC sound cards. Basically, if you have no subwoofer, you hear no LFE information. If your LF & RF speakers lack bass, the LFE speaker may or may not be able to help you. (2) The LFE channel is distributed among all speakers depending on their properties and the crossover point settings. In no case is the LFE channel above the crossover setting sent anyplace but the subwoofer except of course if there is no subwoofer. If there is no subwoofer, the proper assignment for LFE channel signal above the crosover point would appear to be the center channel, subject to the settings for that speaker. However, below the crossover setting, the LFE channel's content is pooled and divided between the subwoofer (if present) and all other speakers that were identified as being "large*. This is a pretty high-quality implementation, and typical of mid fi consumer audio, and up. Let me elaborate. My main system which is used for both HT and music, has no subwoofer at all from the standpoint of surround processor bass management. My surround processor's subwoofer output receives no signal. A subwoofer is present, but it is part of the LF & RF subsystem. The RF & LF speakers are defined to the surround processor as being "large". An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. By all accounts and tests, the LFE channel is well-represented in the sound field in the listening room even though this system effectively has no LFE speaker. I note that my surround processor has no level controls for the subwoofer, but it does have a level control for the LFE channel. The LFE channel is obviously virtualized. I arrived at this setup experimentally, because my surround processor has only a single crossover frequency, and it is inappropriate for the speakers and the room. I think this indirectly contradicts the claim that: "For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency." My system has no LFE speaker whatsoever, and yet the LFE channel is well-represented in the room. Not only is the LFE represesented, but it is also clearly and logically imaged. See my other post and links. OK, let's do it. "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency." This is one of those "depends on" statements without some unstated dependencies. These days we have subwoofers with 10, 8 and even 6 inch drivers. These speakers can easily have relatively smooth response up to say 300 Hz, which is the highest "subwoofer" crossover frequency I can conceive of in a system with pretensions to sound quality. My point is that with a driver like this pointed at the listener and a decently-designed crossover, a dip due to the acoustic properties of the sub and satellite is unlikely for any reasonable crossover setting. More likely, the bass and perhaps even the mid-bass imaging will be upset. We can argue all day as to whether the ear hears directionality at 60 Hz, but by 150 Hz there's very little doubt. For example, the intention of the recordist might be that the bass come from either the LF or RF, but if the crossover is at 150 Hz and the subwoofer and LF & RF speakers aren't positioned very close to each other or if they are close but you are sitting close to them, you're going to hear a lot of that bass coming from the center. I call that bass imaging failure. "One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location." It's true that a sub that is distorting will generate output above the crossover frequency and therefore be easier to locate. However, you don't need to presume substandard equipment to explain why a high crossover frequency will simply allow the listener to localize sounds to the subwoofer because the crossover point is too high for the application. The ear localizes the sound source better and better as the signal frequency goes up from 60 to 80 Hz. One way to partially circumvent this is to put the subwoofer very close to the satellites and to put the satellites closer to each other. However, this approach to reducing bass imaging failure causes some bass imaging to be lost. "If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack." Good advice. I've seen this work many times. "I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary." Generally speaking, more good advice. However, it's non-specific about what the receiver's LFE channel control is called and what it actually controls. I frequently see a LFE control, not a subwoofer control. There's a big difference because the LFE is effectively an input to the bass management subsystem, while the subwoofer is an output from the bass management subsystem. No need to comment much on the remaining comment where we agree. For a counterpoint, I consider the following which showed up in my research: http://www.abluesky.com/m/p/bs10011b.pdf page 10: "The LFE Channel was originally designed for film applications as a way to extend the low frequency "head-room" (not frequency response) of the playback system. This additional headroom was created by adding +10dB of in-band gain to the LFE channel. This channel should only be used when no additional headroom is available in the other channels for low frequency effects. As an example, you may use the LFE channel to increase the dynamic low frequency content of a movie that has many large explosions. This is rarely the case in music, although there may be some creative reasons to use the LFE from time to time. It is important to note that no "significant" audio should be sent exclusively to the LFE channel. The reason for this is that if a Dolby Digital audio track is folded down to 2-channels, which can happen if a consumer doesn't have a surround system, the LFE channel will not be added to the fold-down mix (all other channels will be added to the fold-down)." The document I quoted relates to a dedicated bass management product for use in audio production. The manual seems to make interesting reading. Other similar tools: http://www.smr-home-theatre.org/surr...image_13.shtml http://pdf.outlawaudio.com/outlaw/docs/icbm_manual.pdf Also, various online audio-related discussion groups where various controversies related to these products have been logged. Google seemed to find a good selection of these with the search words: bass management controller . |
#26
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"Arny Krueger" writes:
An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. Can you be more specific about this crossover product? Who makes it? Are there any negative effects of using it? -- Steven E. Harris :: Raytheon :: http://www.raytheon.com |
#27
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"Arny Krueger" writes:
An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. Can you be more specific about this crossover product? Who makes it? Are there any negative effects of using it? -- Steven E. Harris :: Raytheon :: http://www.raytheon.com |
#28
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"Arny Krueger" writes:
An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. Can you be more specific about this crossover product? Who makes it? Are there any negative effects of using it? -- Steven E. Harris :: Raytheon :: http://www.raytheon.com |
#29
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"Arny Krueger" writes:
An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. Can you be more specific about this crossover product? Who makes it? Are there any negative effects of using it? -- Steven E. Harris :: Raytheon :: http://www.raytheon.com |
#30
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. Thanks. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. That's an interesting claim. I'd like to see it supported. For a preamp/receiver to sport the Dolby Digital or THX logos it is required the processing be done this way. This is detailed in their "confidential" design papers. I couldn't find a good description on their public site. However, it is briefly discussed in this document: 5.1-Channel Production Guidelines Issue 1 (page 31 of 83) http://www.dolby.com/tech/L.mn.0002.5.1Guide.s.pdf "Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" The design guidelines spell out in no uncertain terms that the LFE channel must be summed with the full range channels first and then LPF. Therefore, any content in the LFE channel above the crossover frequency will be attenuated in the subwoofer output. As a side note, all THX certified speakers are designed to be set to small. I've seen two general ways that the LFE channel is handled" (1) The LFE channel is sent to the subwoofer without actually being changed by any bass management. If any other speakers are set for "small", their bass content below the crossover frequency may be added to the LFE info in the subwoofer feed. This is pretty crude especially the ones where there is really no bass management. Approaches like these show up in some low-end implementations, including mid-end consumer PC sound cards. Basically, if you have no subwoofer, you hear no LFE information. If your LF & RF speakers lack bass, the LFE speaker may or may not be able to help you. This certainly violates the Dolby Digital licensing agreement. (2) The LFE channel is distributed among all speakers depending on their properties and the crossover point settings. Dolby/THX licensing allows redirection of the LFE to all channels only if no subwoofer. If subwoofer exists then LFE can only be routed to the main left/right. However, some decoders have a "super" mode that combines LFE and bass from small channels and redirects to all large speakers. THX does not recommend this and if done THX requires all THX processing to be disabled. Compliance is tested during THX certification. In no case is the LFE channel above the crossover setting sent anyplace but the subwoofer except of course if there is no subwoofer. Further, the LFE content above the crossover frequency is being filtered for the subwoofer output and content is lost. If there is no subwoofer, the proper assignment for LFE channel signal above the crosover point would appear to be the center channel, subject to the settings for that speaker. see above for dolby/thx certification. However, below the crossover setting, the LFE channel's content is pooled and divided between the subwoofer (if present) and all other speakers that were identified as being "large*. This is a pretty high-quality implementation, and typical of mid fi consumer audio, and up. Again, see above for dolby/thx certification. Let me elaborate. My main system which is used for both HT and music, has no subwoofer at all from the standpoint of surround processor bass management. My surround processor's subwoofer output receives no signal. A subwoofer is present, but it is part of the LF & RF subsystem. The RF & LF speakers are defined to the surround processor as being "large". An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. This is one of the best ways to implement LFE and low bass from the full range channels. Although, I'm not doing it now I intend to shortly. By all accounts and tests, the LFE channel is well-represented in the sound field in the listening room even though this system effectively has no LFE speaker. I note that my surround processor has no level controls for the subwoofer, but it does have a level control for the LFE channel. The LFE channel is obviously virtualized. I arrived at this setup experimentally, because my surround processor has only a single crossover frequency, and it is inappropriate for the speakers and the room. It also preserves all LFE content regardless of crossover frequency...which is why I'm gonna do it soon ![]() I think this indirectly contradicts the claim that: "For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency." My system has no LFE speaker whatsoever, and yet the LFE channel is well-represented in the room. Not only is the LFE represesented, but it is also clearly and logically imaged. My comments were intended for the sub output on a pre/pro in which there is loss. With an outboard crossover as you have done it's not an issue. "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency." This is one of those "depends on" statements without some unstated dependencies. These days we have subwoofers with 10, 8 and even 6 inch drivers. These speakers can easily have relatively smooth response up to say 300 Hz, which is the highest "subwoofer" crossover frequency I can conceive of in a system with pretensions to sound quality. My point is that with a driver like this pointed at the listener and a decently-designed crossover, a dip due to the acoustic properties of the sub and satellite is unlikely for any reasonable crossover setting. The point I was trying to make is small satellites will be excursion limited in their lowest octaves. In my case, I have a massive IB subwoofer that has 15 liters of displacement at Xmax. With my original satellite speakers I adjusted levels to achieve a flat response at low and moderate SPL. However, when cranked to high SPL the satellites couldn't keep up on their low end and a dip in the response appeared. Even with the crossover at 160Hz the dip would appear at the highest SPLs. I upgraded to mains with better bass capability and no dip even at 110dB at 80Hz. More likely, the bass and perhaps even the mid-bass imaging will be upset. We can argue all day as to whether the ear hears directionality at 60 Hz, but by 150 Hz there's very little doubt. For example, the intention of the recordist might be that the bass come from either the LF or RF, but if the crossover is at 150 Hz and the subwoofer and LF & RF speakers aren't positioned very close to each other or if they are close but you are sitting close to them, you're going to hear a lot of that bass coming from the center. I call that bass imaging failure. Agreed. "One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location." It's true that a sub that is distorting will generate output above the crossover frequency and therefore be easier to locate. However, you don't need to presume substandard equipment to explain why a high crossover frequency will simply allow the listener to localize sounds to the subwoofer because the crossover point is too high for the application. The ear localizes the sound source better and better as the signal frequency goes up from 60 to 80 Hz. One way to partially circumvent this is to put the subwoofer very close to the satellites and to put the satellites closer to each other. However, this approach to reducing bass imaging failure causes some bass imaging to be lost. Good point. "If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack." Good advice. I've seen this work many times. "I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary." Generally speaking, more good advice. However, it's non-specific about what the receiver's LFE channel control is called and what it actually controls. I frequently see a LFE control, not a subwoofer control. There's a big difference because the LFE is effectively an input to the bass management subsystem, while the subwoofer is an output from the bass management subsystem. Yep. You're right. No need to comment much on the remaining comment where we agree. For a counterpoint, I consider the following which showed up in my research: http://www.abluesky.com/m/p/bs10011b.pdf page 10: "The LFE Channel was originally designed for film applications as a way to extend the low frequency "head-room" (not frequency response) of the playback system. This additional headroom was created by adding +10dB of in-band gain to the LFE channel. This channel should only be used when no additional headroom is available in the other channels for low frequency effects. As an example, you may use the LFE channel to increase the dynamic low frequency content of a movie that has many large explosions. This is rarely the case in music, although there may be some creative reasons to use the LFE from time to time. It is important to note that no "significant" audio should be sent exclusively to the LFE channel. The reason for this is that if a Dolby Digital audio track is folded down to 2-channels, which can happen if a consumer doesn't have a surround system, the LFE channel will not be added to the fold-down mix (all other channels will be added to the fold-down)." Yes, this is verbatim from the Dolby manual. |
#31
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. Thanks. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. That's an interesting claim. I'd like to see it supported. For a preamp/receiver to sport the Dolby Digital or THX logos it is required the processing be done this way. This is detailed in their "confidential" design papers. I couldn't find a good description on their public site. However, it is briefly discussed in this document: 5.1-Channel Production Guidelines Issue 1 (page 31 of 83) http://www.dolby.com/tech/L.mn.0002.5.1Guide.s.pdf "Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" The design guidelines spell out in no uncertain terms that the LFE channel must be summed with the full range channels first and then LPF. Therefore, any content in the LFE channel above the crossover frequency will be attenuated in the subwoofer output. As a side note, all THX certified speakers are designed to be set to small. I've seen two general ways that the LFE channel is handled" (1) The LFE channel is sent to the subwoofer without actually being changed by any bass management. If any other speakers are set for "small", their bass content below the crossover frequency may be added to the LFE info in the subwoofer feed. This is pretty crude especially the ones where there is really no bass management. Approaches like these show up in some low-end implementations, including mid-end consumer PC sound cards. Basically, if you have no subwoofer, you hear no LFE information. If your LF & RF speakers lack bass, the LFE speaker may or may not be able to help you. This certainly violates the Dolby Digital licensing agreement. (2) The LFE channel is distributed among all speakers depending on their properties and the crossover point settings. Dolby/THX licensing allows redirection of the LFE to all channels only if no subwoofer. If subwoofer exists then LFE can only be routed to the main left/right. However, some decoders have a "super" mode that combines LFE and bass from small channels and redirects to all large speakers. THX does not recommend this and if done THX requires all THX processing to be disabled. Compliance is tested during THX certification. In no case is the LFE channel above the crossover setting sent anyplace but the subwoofer except of course if there is no subwoofer. Further, the LFE content above the crossover frequency is being filtered for the subwoofer output and content is lost. If there is no subwoofer, the proper assignment for LFE channel signal above the crosover point would appear to be the center channel, subject to the settings for that speaker. see above for dolby/thx certification. However, below the crossover setting, the LFE channel's content is pooled and divided between the subwoofer (if present) and all other speakers that were identified as being "large*. This is a pretty high-quality implementation, and typical of mid fi consumer audio, and up. Again, see above for dolby/thx certification. Let me elaborate. My main system which is used for both HT and music, has no subwoofer at all from the standpoint of surround processor bass management. My surround processor's subwoofer output receives no signal. A subwoofer is present, but it is part of the LF & RF subsystem. The RF & LF speakers are defined to the surround processor as being "large". An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. This is one of the best ways to implement LFE and low bass from the full range channels. Although, I'm not doing it now I intend to shortly. By all accounts and tests, the LFE channel is well-represented in the sound field in the listening room even though this system effectively has no LFE speaker. I note that my surround processor has no level controls for the subwoofer, but it does have a level control for the LFE channel. The LFE channel is obviously virtualized. I arrived at this setup experimentally, because my surround processor has only a single crossover frequency, and it is inappropriate for the speakers and the room. It also preserves all LFE content regardless of crossover frequency...which is why I'm gonna do it soon ![]() I think this indirectly contradicts the claim that: "For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency." My system has no LFE speaker whatsoever, and yet the LFE channel is well-represented in the room. Not only is the LFE represesented, but it is also clearly and logically imaged. My comments were intended for the sub output on a pre/pro in which there is loss. With an outboard crossover as you have done it's not an issue. "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency." This is one of those "depends on" statements without some unstated dependencies. These days we have subwoofers with 10, 8 and even 6 inch drivers. These speakers can easily have relatively smooth response up to say 300 Hz, which is the highest "subwoofer" crossover frequency I can conceive of in a system with pretensions to sound quality. My point is that with a driver like this pointed at the listener and a decently-designed crossover, a dip due to the acoustic properties of the sub and satellite is unlikely for any reasonable crossover setting. The point I was trying to make is small satellites will be excursion limited in their lowest octaves. In my case, I have a massive IB subwoofer that has 15 liters of displacement at Xmax. With my original satellite speakers I adjusted levels to achieve a flat response at low and moderate SPL. However, when cranked to high SPL the satellites couldn't keep up on their low end and a dip in the response appeared. Even with the crossover at 160Hz the dip would appear at the highest SPLs. I upgraded to mains with better bass capability and no dip even at 110dB at 80Hz. More likely, the bass and perhaps even the mid-bass imaging will be upset. We can argue all day as to whether the ear hears directionality at 60 Hz, but by 150 Hz there's very little doubt. For example, the intention of the recordist might be that the bass come from either the LF or RF, but if the crossover is at 150 Hz and the subwoofer and LF & RF speakers aren't positioned very close to each other or if they are close but you are sitting close to them, you're going to hear a lot of that bass coming from the center. I call that bass imaging failure. Agreed. "One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location." It's true that a sub that is distorting will generate output above the crossover frequency and therefore be easier to locate. However, you don't need to presume substandard equipment to explain why a high crossover frequency will simply allow the listener to localize sounds to the subwoofer because the crossover point is too high for the application. The ear localizes the sound source better and better as the signal frequency goes up from 60 to 80 Hz. One way to partially circumvent this is to put the subwoofer very close to the satellites and to put the satellites closer to each other. However, this approach to reducing bass imaging failure causes some bass imaging to be lost. Good point. "If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack." Good advice. I've seen this work many times. "I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary." Generally speaking, more good advice. However, it's non-specific about what the receiver's LFE channel control is called and what it actually controls. I frequently see a LFE control, not a subwoofer control. There's a big difference because the LFE is effectively an input to the bass management subsystem, while the subwoofer is an output from the bass management subsystem. Yep. You're right. No need to comment much on the remaining comment where we agree. For a counterpoint, I consider the following which showed up in my research: http://www.abluesky.com/m/p/bs10011b.pdf page 10: "The LFE Channel was originally designed for film applications as a way to extend the low frequency "head-room" (not frequency response) of the playback system. This additional headroom was created by adding +10dB of in-band gain to the LFE channel. This channel should only be used when no additional headroom is available in the other channels for low frequency effects. As an example, you may use the LFE channel to increase the dynamic low frequency content of a movie that has many large explosions. This is rarely the case in music, although there may be some creative reasons to use the LFE from time to time. It is important to note that no "significant" audio should be sent exclusively to the LFE channel. The reason for this is that if a Dolby Digital audio track is folded down to 2-channels, which can happen if a consumer doesn't have a surround system, the LFE channel will not be added to the fold-down mix (all other channels will be added to the fold-down)." Yes, this is verbatim from the Dolby manual. |
#32
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. Thanks. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. That's an interesting claim. I'd like to see it supported. For a preamp/receiver to sport the Dolby Digital or THX logos it is required the processing be done this way. This is detailed in their "confidential" design papers. I couldn't find a good description on their public site. However, it is briefly discussed in this document: 5.1-Channel Production Guidelines Issue 1 (page 31 of 83) http://www.dolby.com/tech/L.mn.0002.5.1Guide.s.pdf "Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" The design guidelines spell out in no uncertain terms that the LFE channel must be summed with the full range channels first and then LPF. Therefore, any content in the LFE channel above the crossover frequency will be attenuated in the subwoofer output. As a side note, all THX certified speakers are designed to be set to small. I've seen two general ways that the LFE channel is handled" (1) The LFE channel is sent to the subwoofer without actually being changed by any bass management. If any other speakers are set for "small", their bass content below the crossover frequency may be added to the LFE info in the subwoofer feed. This is pretty crude especially the ones where there is really no bass management. Approaches like these show up in some low-end implementations, including mid-end consumer PC sound cards. Basically, if you have no subwoofer, you hear no LFE information. If your LF & RF speakers lack bass, the LFE speaker may or may not be able to help you. This certainly violates the Dolby Digital licensing agreement. (2) The LFE channel is distributed among all speakers depending on their properties and the crossover point settings. Dolby/THX licensing allows redirection of the LFE to all channels only if no subwoofer. If subwoofer exists then LFE can only be routed to the main left/right. However, some decoders have a "super" mode that combines LFE and bass from small channels and redirects to all large speakers. THX does not recommend this and if done THX requires all THX processing to be disabled. Compliance is tested during THX certification. In no case is the LFE channel above the crossover setting sent anyplace but the subwoofer except of course if there is no subwoofer. Further, the LFE content above the crossover frequency is being filtered for the subwoofer output and content is lost. If there is no subwoofer, the proper assignment for LFE channel signal above the crosover point would appear to be the center channel, subject to the settings for that speaker. see above for dolby/thx certification. However, below the crossover setting, the LFE channel's content is pooled and divided between the subwoofer (if present) and all other speakers that were identified as being "large*. This is a pretty high-quality implementation, and typical of mid fi consumer audio, and up. Again, see above for dolby/thx certification. Let me elaborate. My main system which is used for both HT and music, has no subwoofer at all from the standpoint of surround processor bass management. My surround processor's subwoofer output receives no signal. A subwoofer is present, but it is part of the LF & RF subsystem. The RF & LF speakers are defined to the surround processor as being "large". An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. This is one of the best ways to implement LFE and low bass from the full range channels. Although, I'm not doing it now I intend to shortly. By all accounts and tests, the LFE channel is well-represented in the sound field in the listening room even though this system effectively has no LFE speaker. I note that my surround processor has no level controls for the subwoofer, but it does have a level control for the LFE channel. The LFE channel is obviously virtualized. I arrived at this setup experimentally, because my surround processor has only a single crossover frequency, and it is inappropriate for the speakers and the room. It also preserves all LFE content regardless of crossover frequency...which is why I'm gonna do it soon ![]() I think this indirectly contradicts the claim that: "For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency." My system has no LFE speaker whatsoever, and yet the LFE channel is well-represented in the room. Not only is the LFE represesented, but it is also clearly and logically imaged. My comments were intended for the sub output on a pre/pro in which there is loss. With an outboard crossover as you have done it's not an issue. "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency." This is one of those "depends on" statements without some unstated dependencies. These days we have subwoofers with 10, 8 and even 6 inch drivers. These speakers can easily have relatively smooth response up to say 300 Hz, which is the highest "subwoofer" crossover frequency I can conceive of in a system with pretensions to sound quality. My point is that with a driver like this pointed at the listener and a decently-designed crossover, a dip due to the acoustic properties of the sub and satellite is unlikely for any reasonable crossover setting. The point I was trying to make is small satellites will be excursion limited in their lowest octaves. In my case, I have a massive IB subwoofer that has 15 liters of displacement at Xmax. With my original satellite speakers I adjusted levels to achieve a flat response at low and moderate SPL. However, when cranked to high SPL the satellites couldn't keep up on their low end and a dip in the response appeared. Even with the crossover at 160Hz the dip would appear at the highest SPLs. I upgraded to mains with better bass capability and no dip even at 110dB at 80Hz. More likely, the bass and perhaps even the mid-bass imaging will be upset. We can argue all day as to whether the ear hears directionality at 60 Hz, but by 150 Hz there's very little doubt. For example, the intention of the recordist might be that the bass come from either the LF or RF, but if the crossover is at 150 Hz and the subwoofer and LF & RF speakers aren't positioned very close to each other or if they are close but you are sitting close to them, you're going to hear a lot of that bass coming from the center. I call that bass imaging failure. Agreed. "One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location." It's true that a sub that is distorting will generate output above the crossover frequency and therefore be easier to locate. However, you don't need to presume substandard equipment to explain why a high crossover frequency will simply allow the listener to localize sounds to the subwoofer because the crossover point is too high for the application. The ear localizes the sound source better and better as the signal frequency goes up from 60 to 80 Hz. One way to partially circumvent this is to put the subwoofer very close to the satellites and to put the satellites closer to each other. However, this approach to reducing bass imaging failure causes some bass imaging to be lost. Good point. "If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack." Good advice. I've seen this work many times. "I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary." Generally speaking, more good advice. However, it's non-specific about what the receiver's LFE channel control is called and what it actually controls. I frequently see a LFE control, not a subwoofer control. There's a big difference because the LFE is effectively an input to the bass management subsystem, while the subwoofer is an output from the bass management subsystem. Yep. You're right. No need to comment much on the remaining comment where we agree. For a counterpoint, I consider the following which showed up in my research: http://www.abluesky.com/m/p/bs10011b.pdf page 10: "The LFE Channel was originally designed for film applications as a way to extend the low frequency "head-room" (not frequency response) of the playback system. This additional headroom was created by adding +10dB of in-band gain to the LFE channel. This channel should only be used when no additional headroom is available in the other channels for low frequency effects. As an example, you may use the LFE channel to increase the dynamic low frequency content of a movie that has many large explosions. This is rarely the case in music, although there may be some creative reasons to use the LFE from time to time. It is important to note that no "significant" audio should be sent exclusively to the LFE channel. The reason for this is that if a Dolby Digital audio track is folded down to 2-channels, which can happen if a consumer doesn't have a surround system, the LFE channel will not be added to the fold-down mix (all other channels will be added to the fold-down)." Yes, this is verbatim from the Dolby manual. |
#33
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... The general rule is set the crossover as low as you can without overloading the satellites with bass. That will depend on your room and the loudness you prefer to listen at, among other things. For audio (stereo) this is good advice. Thanks. For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency. That's an interesting claim. I'd like to see it supported. For a preamp/receiver to sport the Dolby Digital or THX logos it is required the processing be done this way. This is detailed in their "confidential" design papers. I couldn't find a good description on their public site. However, it is briefly discussed in this document: 5.1-Channel Production Guidelines Issue 1 (page 31 of 83) http://www.dolby.com/tech/L.mn.0002.5.1Guide.s.pdf "Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" The design guidelines spell out in no uncertain terms that the LFE channel must be summed with the full range channels first and then LPF. Therefore, any content in the LFE channel above the crossover frequency will be attenuated in the subwoofer output. As a side note, all THX certified speakers are designed to be set to small. I've seen two general ways that the LFE channel is handled" (1) The LFE channel is sent to the subwoofer without actually being changed by any bass management. If any other speakers are set for "small", their bass content below the crossover frequency may be added to the LFE info in the subwoofer feed. This is pretty crude especially the ones where there is really no bass management. Approaches like these show up in some low-end implementations, including mid-end consumer PC sound cards. Basically, if you have no subwoofer, you hear no LFE information. If your LF & RF speakers lack bass, the LFE speaker may or may not be able to help you. This certainly violates the Dolby Digital licensing agreement. (2) The LFE channel is distributed among all speakers depending on their properties and the crossover point settings. Dolby/THX licensing allows redirection of the LFE to all channels only if no subwoofer. If subwoofer exists then LFE can only be routed to the main left/right. However, some decoders have a "super" mode that combines LFE and bass from small channels and redirects to all large speakers. THX does not recommend this and if done THX requires all THX processing to be disabled. Compliance is tested during THX certification. In no case is the LFE channel above the crossover setting sent anyplace but the subwoofer except of course if there is no subwoofer. Further, the LFE content above the crossover frequency is being filtered for the subwoofer output and content is lost. If there is no subwoofer, the proper assignment for LFE channel signal above the crosover point would appear to be the center channel, subject to the settings for that speaker. see above for dolby/thx certification. However, below the crossover setting, the LFE channel's content is pooled and divided between the subwoofer (if present) and all other speakers that were identified as being "large*. This is a pretty high-quality implementation, and typical of mid fi consumer audio, and up. Again, see above for dolby/thx certification. Let me elaborate. My main system which is used for both HT and music, has no subwoofer at all from the standpoint of surround processor bass management. My surround processor's subwoofer output receives no signal. A subwoofer is present, but it is part of the LF & RF subsystem. The RF & LF speakers are defined to the surround processor as being "large". An outboard 24 dB/octave crossover splits the subwoofer signal from the feed to the LF & RF speakers. This is one of the best ways to implement LFE and low bass from the full range channels. Although, I'm not doing it now I intend to shortly. By all accounts and tests, the LFE channel is well-represented in the sound field in the listening room even though this system effectively has no LFE speaker. I note that my surround processor has no level controls for the subwoofer, but it does have a level control for the LFE channel. The LFE channel is obviously virtualized. I arrived at this setup experimentally, because my surround processor has only a single crossover frequency, and it is inappropriate for the speakers and the room. It also preserves all LFE content regardless of crossover frequency...which is why I'm gonna do it soon ![]() I think this indirectly contradicts the claim that: "For movie soundtracks with speakers set to 'small' you will loose LFE content above the crossover frequency." My system has no LFE speaker whatsoever, and yet the LFE channel is well-represented in the room. Not only is the LFE represesented, but it is also clearly and logically imaged. My comments were intended for the sub output on a pre/pro in which there is loss. With an outboard crossover as you have done it's not an issue. "Rusty Boudreaux" wrote in message "If they are really small satellites you may have integration issues. What you want is a smooth frequency response from where the sub drops out to where the mains pick up. With small satellites at high volumes their low frequency ability is reduced. You can end up with a dip in the response because the satellites loose output near the crossover frequency." This is one of those "depends on" statements without some unstated dependencies. These days we have subwoofers with 10, 8 and even 6 inch drivers. These speakers can easily have relatively smooth response up to say 300 Hz, which is the highest "subwoofer" crossover frequency I can conceive of in a system with pretensions to sound quality. My point is that with a driver like this pointed at the listener and a decently-designed crossover, a dip due to the acoustic properties of the sub and satellite is unlikely for any reasonable crossover setting. The point I was trying to make is small satellites will be excursion limited in their lowest octaves. In my case, I have a massive IB subwoofer that has 15 liters of displacement at Xmax. With my original satellite speakers I adjusted levels to achieve a flat response at low and moderate SPL. However, when cranked to high SPL the satellites couldn't keep up on their low end and a dip in the response appeared. Even with the crossover at 160Hz the dip would appear at the highest SPLs. I upgraded to mains with better bass capability and no dip even at 110dB at 80Hz. More likely, the bass and perhaps even the mid-bass imaging will be upset. We can argue all day as to whether the ear hears directionality at 60 Hz, but by 150 Hz there's very little doubt. For example, the intention of the recordist might be that the bass come from either the LF or RF, but if the crossover is at 150 Hz and the subwoofer and LF & RF speakers aren't positioned very close to each other or if they are close but you are sitting close to them, you're going to hear a lot of that bass coming from the center. I call that bass imaging failure. Agreed. "One way to combat this with small speakers is to set crossover at a relatively high frequency. However, you'll have to have a really good sub that doesn't throw harmonic distortion into higher audible frequency region...otherwise you'll easily be able to pinpoint the sub location." It's true that a sub that is distorting will generate output above the crossover frequency and therefore be easier to locate. However, you don't need to presume substandard equipment to explain why a high crossover frequency will simply allow the listener to localize sounds to the subwoofer because the crossover point is too high for the application. The ear localizes the sound source better and better as the signal frequency goes up from 60 to 80 Hz. One way to partially circumvent this is to put the subwoofer very close to the satellites and to put the satellites closer to each other. However, this approach to reducing bass imaging failure causes some bass imaging to be lost. Good point. "If your really serious about getting a good match I recommend upgrading to more full range speakers and/or adding midbass drivers to pick up the slack." Good advice. I've seen this work many times. "I recommend setting the receiver to 0dB and adjusting the sub amp until the level is as close as you can get. Then use the receiver to fine tune if necessary." Generally speaking, more good advice. However, it's non-specific about what the receiver's LFE channel control is called and what it actually controls. I frequently see a LFE control, not a subwoofer control. There's a big difference because the LFE is effectively an input to the bass management subsystem, while the subwoofer is an output from the bass management subsystem. Yep. You're right. No need to comment much on the remaining comment where we agree. For a counterpoint, I consider the following which showed up in my research: http://www.abluesky.com/m/p/bs10011b.pdf page 10: "The LFE Channel was originally designed for film applications as a way to extend the low frequency "head-room" (not frequency response) of the playback system. This additional headroom was created by adding +10dB of in-band gain to the LFE channel. This channel should only be used when no additional headroom is available in the other channels for low frequency effects. As an example, you may use the LFE channel to increase the dynamic low frequency content of a movie that has many large explosions. This is rarely the case in music, although there may be some creative reasons to use the LFE from time to time. It is important to note that no "significant" audio should be sent exclusively to the LFE channel. The reason for this is that if a Dolby Digital audio track is folded down to 2-channels, which can happen if a consumer doesn't have a surround system, the LFE channel will not be added to the fold-down mix (all other channels will be added to the fold-down)." Yes, this is verbatim from the Dolby manual. |
#34
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Rusty Boudreaux wrote:
"Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" If one wanted the receiver to NOT do this "effect", what would they look for? A better higher-end model, or some specific mode/technology? |
#35
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Rusty Boudreaux wrote:
"Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" If one wanted the receiver to NOT do this "effect", what would they look for? A better higher-end model, or some specific mode/technology? |
#36
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Rusty Boudreaux wrote:
"Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" If one wanted the receiver to NOT do this "effect", what would they look for? A better higher-end model, or some specific mode/technology? |
#37
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Rusty Boudreaux wrote:
"Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" If one wanted the receiver to NOT do this "effect", what would they look for? A better higher-end model, or some specific mode/technology? |
#38
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"Joseph Oberlander" wrote in
message ink.net... "Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" If one wanted the receiver to NOT do this "effect", what would they look for? A better higher-end model, or some specific mode/technology? If it properly decodes DD it will do this. It's a part of the Dolby/THX licensing and there are technical reasons why it's done. Some higher end preamps allow all sorts of interesting configurations but I'm leery of their practicality. In reality it's not that big a deal. Most content creators understand this and don't put any significant content above 80 Hz or so in the LFE track. I've found for my system 100Hz works best in minimizing lost content, sub/main integration, and non localization of the sub. You can do as Arny suggested and connect an external crossover to your mains for the sub and set the receiver to no sub. |
#39
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"Joseph Oberlander" wrote in
message ink.net... "Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" If one wanted the receiver to NOT do this "effect", what would they look for? A better higher-end model, or some specific mode/technology? If it properly decodes DD it will do this. It's a part of the Dolby/THX licensing and there are technical reasons why it's done. Some higher end preamps allow all sorts of interesting configurations but I'm leery of their practicality. In reality it's not that big a deal. Most content creators understand this and don't put any significant content above 80 Hz or so in the LFE track. I've found for my system 100Hz works best in minimizing lost content, sub/main integration, and non localization of the sub. You can do as Arny suggested and connect an external crossover to your mains for the sub and set the receiver to no sub. |
#40
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"Joseph Oberlander" wrote in
message ink.net... "Consumer decoders take the LFE signal and add any channels in need of bass management, as determined either by product design or user selection. The five main channels are then high-pass filtered at either a fixed frequency of 80 Hz or a selectable frequency of 80, 100, or 120 Hz. The summation of the LFE and any other channels is low-pass filtered at the same frequency. If the crossover frequency is fixed at 80 Hz, as is standard in lower priced decoders, information in the LFE channel between 80 Hz and 120 Hz will be reproduced at a lower level than it is recorded" If one wanted the receiver to NOT do this "effect", what would they look for? A better higher-end model, or some specific mode/technology? If it properly decodes DD it will do this. It's a part of the Dolby/THX licensing and there are technical reasons why it's done. Some higher end preamps allow all sorts of interesting configurations but I'm leery of their practicality. In reality it's not that big a deal. Most content creators understand this and don't put any significant content above 80 Hz or so in the LFE track. I've found for my system 100Hz works best in minimizing lost content, sub/main integration, and non localization of the sub. You can do as Arny suggested and connect an external crossover to your mains for the sub and set the receiver to no sub. |
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