• WANTED: Happy members who like to discuss audio and other topics related to our interest. Desire to learn and share knowledge of science required. There are many reviews of audio hardware and expert members to help answer your questions. Click here to have your audio equipment measured for free!

SVS SB-3000 - inside pics, specs and thoughts

trl

Major Contributor
King of Mods
Joined
Feb 28, 2018
Messages
1,977
Likes
2,538
Location
Iasi, RO
SVS SB-3000 - inside pics, personal thoughts


SB-3000 Subwoofer Owner's Manual, Quick Start Guide and manufacturer specs can help customers in how to properly setup and operate this subwoofer in their homes or studios.

I purchased a brand new 13” SB-3000 subwoofer, to replace the 12” SB-1000 pair I owned (reviewed here: https://www.audiosciencereview.com/...s-sb-1000-inside-pics-personal-thoughts.7842/) and used for the last couple of years. The reason for the upgrade was to reproduce a bit better the lowest octave (20...40 Hz), to gain a few more dBs SPL there, to adjust sub’s power and crossover remotely, but also to reuse living space a bit better (single sub vs. dual subs). In terms of pure power we’re comparing two SLEDGE STA-300D amplifiers with 300 W RMS each (720 W peak each) vs. one Sledge STA-800D2 amplifier having 800 W RMS (2500 W peak). The SPL difference is clearly audible from the very beginning, no questions asked. Actually, my gypsum-boards ceiling might suffer if I crank up the volume too high with SB-3000 connected. Good thing I recently swapped my windows with triple pane 44.2 / 4 / 33.1 Stadip Silence glass. :)

The lowest octave is better reproduced now and one SB-3000 sub is indeed an upgrade over my previous dual SB-1000 subs. The Apple Store SVS app is great, although sometimes I need to choose my desired sound profile twice to actually select it and actually make it work (only the first time after opening the app, probably some sort of "bug"). Having both crossover and EQ on the same app, but also being able to save more audio profiles for Music, Movies etc. brings a big smile on my face.
IMG_0289.PNG
IMG_0290.PNG
IMG_0291.PNG
IMG_0292.PNG
IMG_0293.PNG

As you can see from the above pictograms, my room resonates at around 26 Hz and I needed to lower that frequency with about -9 dB, while at 22 Hz and 48 Hz I needed to increase the amplitude a little bit to flatten the output bass.
Canton GLE 496 + SVS SB3000 firing @90 degrees @-20dB 16Hz copy.jpg

In-room measurement with REW app + ECM999 mic + Motu M4 interface - 2 x Canton GLE 496 + 1 x SB-3000 @90 degrees

I do like the output bass of the SB-3000 for both music and movies, although I'm aware that for movies a ported sub might have an advantage here. SB-3000 is connected to sub-out of the Yamaha A-S701 and I'm using from SVS's app a -18 dB volume for movies and a -20 dB volume for music to perfectly blend in the stereo speakers with the subwoofer. Choosing 2 dB more output for SB-3000 when watching movies is purely subjective and I chose this mostly for a better "boom" and "bang", especially on explosions, gunshots and...earthquakes. :)

Subwoofer’s case is made out of MDF with black polyvinyl on the outside. Sides, internal brackets and backside are having a thickness of about 18.5 mm (about 0.75 inches), while the front baffle is about double as thickness. Inner stuffing has a generous amount of 1 inch thickness properly glued.
IMG_1831 copy.jpg

Driver’s rubber outer diameter is 31 cm/12.2 inch, while entire driver’s size (the outer basket) is almost 35 cm/13.7 inch, so pretty close to 14 inch. The 7 inches wide double magnet is placed inside the internal bracket via soft black rubber tape to absorb inner vibrations.
IMG_1842.JPEG


IMG_1843.JPEG


IMG_1828.JPEG


Inside there is a big metallic plate, that also acts as a heatsink, containing the motherboard and input board that contains the DSP, input buffer and output buffer as well. Motherboard includes the isolated power supply and the amplifier parts.
IMG_0194 copy.jpg

SVS-SB3000 Sledge STA-800D2 amplifier plate

The built-in DSP board contains a STM32 32-bit Arm Cortex M0 MCU with a core CPU running at 48 MHz (datasheet here: https://ro.mouser.com/datasheet/2/389/dm00090510-1797802.pdf), an ADAU1761 SigmaDSP 28-/56-bit, 50 MIPS digital audio processor and the Qualcomm® Bluetooth Low Energy platform technology 28-pin QFN chip CSR 1010 that works in concordance with the specification of BT 4.1 specs (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluetooth#Bluetooth_4.1). This BT radio module (https://docs.qualcomm.com/bundle/publicresource/87-CE857-1.pdf) is not used for transmitting audio signals over the air, but for connecting your mobile device (phone, tablet) to the subwoofer DSP board, so you can properly adjust the built-in DSP and PEQ settings, based on the room measurements done with a dedicated measurement setup (REW etc.). We can also spot a DRV632 audio line driver that removes the DC from the audio lines, most likely used for RCA line-level outputs.
IMG_1815.JPEG

STM32 ARM Cortex M0 MCU


IMG_1816.JPEG

ADAU1761 DSP chip


There are two Class D chip amplifiers inside made by International Rectifier, IRS2092S (https://www.infineon.com/dgdl/irs2092.pdf?fileId=5546d462533600a401535675f1be2790), used with MOSFET output buffers in full bridge mode operation, for a higher output power. Same IRS2092S chip is also used (not bridged) in Mackie MR10Smk3 subwoofer too. More infos about this amplifier chip can also be found here: http://www.irf.com/product-info/fact_sheet/audio-irs2092.pdf. The output power MOSFET transistors are TO-220 case and could be IRFB4227PbF or something with similar specs. A dual-opamp JRC 4580 is most likely placed in the signal path, in front of the IRF chips.
IMG_1818.JPEG

Full bridge IRS2092S class-D amplifier

The built-in power supply has a decent EMI/RFI filter and lot of filtering capacitors. We can spot an off-line SMPS Current Mode Controller ICE3RBR4765JZ. It has a soft-start with two P33N60E (33A, 600V), a Power Factor Correction stage around UCC28063 a full bridge (https://www.bequiet.com/en/insidebequiet/15) with four P33N60E MOSFET transistors, an LLC design with L6599AD. You can check a great post from diyaudio forum (https://www.diyaudio.com/forums/class-d/371218-reapir-svs-pc-4000-1200-sledge-amplifier.html) where Reactance user was able to detail very well the PSU of a SB-4000, which is pretty similar with the one found inside SB-3000, and explain how to repair it in case it gets broken.
IMG_0204.jpg

Common-mode mains filter and a big Metal Oxide Varistor (MOV) + fuse that offers basic protection in case of over-voltage (>255 VAC) for the electronic components of the SB-3000


IMG_1820.JPEG

Output buffer with MOSFET transistors (under the aluminum heatsink)


IMG_1821.JPEG

Power supply close-up

You can check manufacturer’s specifications here https://www.svsound.com/products/sb-3000#techanchor, but there are couple of great measurements and tests done by Audioholics (https://www.audioholics.com/subwoofer-reviews/svs-3000/conclusion) and Erin (https://www.audiosciencereview.com/...b-2000-pro-vs-sb-3000-subwoofer-review.21428/), so feel free to have a look, so you can make an opinion about the max. SPL, frequency response and THD vs. frequency for this rather small but great compression subwoofer.
SB3000_freq.resp.jpg

Frequency response graph from SVS website


SVS offers a 5-years warranty on their subwoofers and is a company that has a very good reputation in dealing with RMA cases, per AVSFORUM, HomeTheaterForum and ASR forum as well.​
 

pozz

Слава Україні
Forum Donor
Editor
Joined
May 21, 2019
Messages
4,036
Likes
6,827
Bump.
 

David_M

Active Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2019
Messages
295
Likes
183
Thanks for the detailed tear-down. I notice that the DSP chip used is a run-of-the-mill low-end audio dsp chip generating up to 50 MIPS. The IR F part is more of a driver than an amplifier. Its outputs feed a couple of high current MOSFETs that drive the woofer.
 
OP
trl

trl

Major Contributor
King of Mods
Joined
Feb 28, 2018
Messages
1,977
Likes
2,538
Location
Iasi, RO
Yes @David_M, just like IRF guys states here: "Class D audio amplifier driver".

Thanks for the add-on.
 

David_M

Active Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2019
Messages
295
Likes
183
Does your SB3000 'Hiss' or generate noise when your ear is next to it, with no incoming signal, ofcourse?
 
OP
trl

trl

Major Contributor
King of Mods
Joined
Feb 28, 2018
Messages
1,977
Likes
2,538
Location
Iasi, RO

Magnusen

Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2020
Messages
18
Likes
0
It's interesting. Does it turn out that the STA-550D is the STA-800D2 without one coil and several capacitors + one irs2092s? If we solder the missing parts, will we get a more powerful amplifier?
 

Attachments

  • loa-subwoofer-svs-pb-2000-pro-08.jpg
    loa-subwoofer-svs-pb-2000-pro-08.jpg
    101.3 KB · Views: 21
Last edited:
OP
trl

trl

Major Contributor
King of Mods
Joined
Feb 28, 2018
Messages
1,977
Likes
2,538
Location
Iasi, RO
Well, we probably need to compare side by side the two boards and see if the above are the only differences. There might also be some EEPROM/Flash that could store some firmware...who knows... Are you thinking to a DIY project? :)
 
  • Like
Reactions: MCH

Magnusen

Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2020
Messages
18
Likes
0
Oh yeah. mass production is what it is. These are twin brother amplifiers. one without a leg :) 550d no bridged, 800d2 is full bridged
 
OP
trl

trl

Major Contributor
King of Mods
Joined
Feb 28, 2018
Messages
1,977
Likes
2,538
Location
Iasi, RO

bboris77

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 23, 2018
Messages
450
Likes
933
Yes, but nothing to be super annoying: https://www.audiosciencereview.com/...000-subwoofer-review.21428/page-6#post-905265. On the previous page there have been few other posts as well, but you can also read the thread until the last page for a better understanding of the hiss.
What about low-level rumble when LFE knob is turned all the way up (to LFE)? Mine SB-1000 does this and it also has a very low-level hiss that sometimes gets very quiet, and sometimes a little bit more audible. SVS is sending me a spare plate amp to see if makes any difference. It really is not a big deal at all, but my workspace is treated acoustically and noise level is at 25dB so I tend to notice anything that makes noise.
 
  • Like
Reactions: MCH
Top Bottom