phoenixdogfan
Major Contributor
In a small apartment, you get a toy poodle and a KC 62. In a real house, you get a Yellow Lab and two SB 2000s.
I had 8 18"(4 subs with 2 18" drivers each) subs in a small(10.5' x 12.5') room at one time and the room wasn't overloaded at all after EQ. Bass was ridiculously clean and tight.
Yeah, I've seen pictures of your system. That's the one I want when I grow up. (or rather upgrade my home cinema). Not the most cost-effective way to get good bass in a small room though![]()
@richard12511Disagree. You can always cut the bass to be exactly equal to a smaller sub if you want less bass. You can't do the opposite, though. What you say might be true without room correction, though.
I had 8 18"(4 subs with 2 18" drivers each) subs in a small(10.5' x 12.5') room at one time and the room wasn't overloaded at all after EQ. Bass was ridiculously clean and tight.
I just bought the SVS Micro 3000 and I’m setting it up now. I’ve matched it with tri-amped Aktiv Linn Ninka’s.
Cost was a factor. With tax and delivery I was a bit over $1000 CDN. The Kef is considerably more.
Still playing with placement and settings.
so I also ordered a miniDSP SHD which is on its way. Once I have mastered the Dirac settings and tuned the room, I think this is going to be one heck of a system that I hope I'll be happy with for some years.
My understanding is the KC62 has variable frequency response based on the playback volume. See the white paper page 8. I've copied the figure below. I thought this would make the KC62 more difficult to use with a DSP. Maybe it's not too much an issue as the differences seem to be mostly > 60 Hz?
8 18"s! that sounds fun haha.Disagree. You can always cut the bass to be exactly equal to a smaller sub if you want less bass. You can't do the opposite, though. What you say might be true without room correction, though.
I had 8 18"(4 subs with 2 18" drivers each) subs in a small(10.5' x 12.5') room at one time and the room wasn't overloaded at all after EQ. Bass was ridiculously clean and tight.
And I thought 7 1/2 feet of subwoofers in my little place was impressive but you've got 12 feet of subwoofers, at this level we're talking beyond Marty McFly:8 18"s! that sounds fun haha.
Anyone have thoughts about the Rel T/9x compared to the Kef kc62? priced the same, the kef seems to scoop quite a bit deeper at 11hz
The technology in the KC62 is cool. I really like the engineering approach, mathematically very elegant and I would do things similarly if I were working in this field. But it still does give rise to this non-linear response, as you mention.
I don't know the extent to which Dirac and the SHD can deal with non-linear corrections...i.e., volume-dependent frequency response. My guess is that Dirac assumes linearity, but I don't know for sure. In the worst case, perhaps I can run correction profiles at different volumes and then select the one to use as I listen. Or I can find the best characteristic correction that works best for my usual listening situation. Either way, I expect the result to be much better than running with no room correction.
The other benefit is lifting low end duties off the shoulders of my LS50 Metas with a high-pass filter. Every account I've read indicates that this is a significant improvement.
So let me get this straight, you've got satellite speakers that are rated at 100 watts RMS combined together with a sub rated at 1000 watts RMS and you're complaining about the sound pressure level of the sub!?!?
You and I have similar setups: SHD + Meta + KC62. To answer your question: Dirac isn’t going to be able to manage the non-linear response of the KC62. Ideally you’d measure at a level where the KC62 is in its sweet spot where the response is linear when including room gain (and that sounds like it’s in your listening volume sweet spot too which is good) then let the KC62 take it from there when you raise the volume. I would forsee a problem if you push the measurement volume too high then Dirac is trying to push the KC62 above where it wants to go and then your correction filter ends up all screwed up at lower volumes.
I like my KC62 and agree it totally transforms the Metas especially once you high pass the Metas, but for the price, I really wish they’d gone with dual 8”. I don’t know if that presented unique engineering problems, but it seems to me it was more of a marketing decision relating to the overall package size. Going to 8” would have minimally increased the size (it would still be tiny with the concentric voice coils!) but would have greatly increased the SPL possible as seen by what the SB3000 Micro can do from 35hz up.
Yes Dirac assumed linearity, so creating different listening profiles for different levels is exactly what I have done and works great. Regardless of using the KC62, having different profiles based on the listening level will also allow you to do bass compensation properly.My guess is that Dirac assumes linearity, but I don't know for sure. In the worst case, perhaps I can run correction profiles at different volumes and then select the one to use as I listen. Or I can find the best characteristic correction that works best for my usual listening situation. Either way, I expect the result to be much better than running with no room correction.