Hi. I have two b&w 683 s2’s, which I find lack a bit of punch for the kind of music I am listening to (mainly in the drums that don’t really have any body feeling for a lack of better working). So I have bought a 10 inch B&W subwoofer, which I have set up putting the crossover knob to the lowest the speakers can go and adjusted the volume in order not to hear the transition between the speakers and the sub.

But the thing is, even though now I have more deep bass, the mid bass of course remains unchanged because of the crossover frequency.

My question is, is there another way to set up the crossover in order to make the mids a bit more energetic. Does the overlap in frequencies cause any undesirable effect?

Thanks!

  • HiImTheNewGuyGuy@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    If your speakers and your sub are both producing 120 Hz but they are greater than 1/4 wavelength apart then you will get comb filtering.

    So if you speakers and sub are close enough that any overlapping frequencies will combine constructively then you’re fine.