Edd M
Joined: 29/05/09
Posts: 20
Loc: Darlington/Leeds, UK
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Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
#923322 - 29/06/11 11:57 AM
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Having been wanting to upgrade my monitors for a while, I've gone for 'KRK Rokit RPG2 6',
mainly due to a friend selling them at a very reasonable price!
My issue is
that the low end response goes to 49Hz. As a 7 string guitarist and 5 string bassist,
I often use the low B strings. On the bass this is a whopping 31Hz (B0)!
49
would presumably only achieve a G above this? I'm assuming that the psycho-acoustics
of harmonics would make the listener hear the correct note, even if technically it were
not there?
Any answers would be lovely. A Subwoofer is out of the question
money wise and studio ethic wise! Cheers, Edd
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4202
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Edd M]
#923333 - 29/06/11 12:20 PM
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Quote Edd M:
Having been wanting
to upgrade my monitors for a while, I've gone for 'KRK Rokit RPG2 6', mainly due to a
friend selling them at a very reasonable price!
My issue is that the low end
response goes to 49Hz. As a 7 string guitarist and 5 string bassist, I often use the
low B strings. On the bass this is a whopping 31Hz (B0)!
49 would presumably
only achieve a G above this? I'm assuming that the psycho-acoustics of harmonics
would make the listener hear the correct note, even if technically it were not there?
Any answers would be lovely. A Subwoofer is out of the question money wise
and studio ethic wise!
That's not bad at all for speakers of that size and price. But if you want to FEEL that
low bass, no it won't happen!
There's a couple of points here. Unless you're
sure your mixes will be played on systems with extended bass responsem it's a good idea to
drastically filter out anything below about 40Hz anyway. It just soaks up power, rattles
speakers to bits and can distort material that IS audible. You'll note that the Rokit
specs mention not only a lower response point (which isn't a hard cut-off point, just the
frequency at which response falls below a certain level) but they also have a hi-pass
filter designed to remove signal below a frequency about 10Hz lower.
If you DO
want those low frequencies, you'll need bigger speakers. One will do - Rokit make
sub-bass units designed to go with your speakers. I understand you may not be able to
afford one, but where's the moral issue? :-)
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18368
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Edd M]
#923350 - 29/06/11 12:45 PM
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Quote Edd M:
My issue is that the
low end response goes to 49Hz. As a 7 string guitarist and 5 string bassist, I often use
the low B strings. On the bass this is a whopping 31Hz (B0)!
49 would
presumably only achieve a G above this? I'm assuming that the psycho-acoustics of
harmonics would make the listener hear the correct note, even if technically it were not
there?
The quoted bandwidth
of the speaker should be given with specific limits such as +/-3dB or +/-10dB or
whatever.
Speakers (and microphones) don't just stop producing sound below (or
above) a certain frequency -- they simply become less efficient or sensitive, resulting in
a smooth roll-off.
So it the speaker was nominally flat to 49Hz, it would
probably still generate an audible signal an octave or more below that, but with lower
intensity. So the chances are that your KRKs will still produce your low Bs, but they
won't be as loud as notes played on higher strings with the same volume.
Moreover, as you say, the ear/brain has the amazing ability to infer fundamentals when
it only hears harmonics.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Edd M
Joined: 29/05/09
Posts: 20
Loc: Darlington/Leeds, UK
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Edd M]
#923353 - 29/06/11 12:54 PM
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Cheers guys! I thought that was the case, although it worried me a bit!
I have
some 'Genius' speakers at the moment, And I'm sure several consumer level (not studio
level) speakers say 20Hz-20kHz on them, but perhaps they don't bother with the flat
response patterns as you suggested Hugh!
My moral issue with the sub, is that I
hold the theory of 'not everyone has decent speakers, let alone a sub' to my chest very
closely! I'm also looking at monitors and the reviews say things like, 'speaker sound
quality is not loud enough or of good quality' - so therefore, not only are they not
'in-the-know' of what a 1w pair of speakers in an LCD monitor should produce, they
obviously don't use a sub! Or consider a sub!
I don't do much for clubs either,
so I feel a sub would be wasted!
Cheers for the responses anyway, I'm sure I'll
be happy with them =D
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narcoman
active member
Joined: 14/08/01
Posts: 8469
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Edd M]
#923365 - 29/06/11 01:34 PM
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I would say - with bass instrument a great deal of what you hear isn't the fundamental.
Even your low B - most of what you'll hear will be above the fundamental note - in fact
I've found it's generally the third harmonic that you hear most of!! So that's right up at
124hz!
Generally it's only really full range systems (including those with
subs - they count) that reproduce those deep frequencies. I haven't really heard monitors
below £10k that do this cleanly and properly. In other words - don't worry too much about
it, you'll get enough information about whats going on with your monitors as you will much
else until you get into high end monitoring and decent listening rooms. Mixing bass, at
the lower price end, is as much about doing a quick check with a meter as anything
else.
One reason to perhaps consider a sub is, even though most people won't
hear it, it will eat up headroom. Bass is hungry.
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4202
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Edd M]
#923390 - 29/06/11 02:49 PM
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Quote Edd M:
My moral issue with
the sub, is that I hold the theory of 'not everyone has decent speakers, let alone a sub'
to my chest very closely!
Quite correct, but I think you're misapplying it.
Why are you buying quality
monitor speakers at all? Yes, mostly your work will be heard on inferior systems -
inferior in plenty of ways other than bass extension. Want a list of those ways? - well,
make a list of everything you think make the Rokits good! You will hear (hopefully) a
less coloured, more detailed, cleaner and more accurate sound than most other people who
listen to your music. This helps you to make mixes that translate well to other
systems.
You can manage quite nicely with monitor speakers that don't go way
down. Just filter out inaudible low bass (check on a spectrum display) and make sure your
mixes sound good within the frequency spectrum everyone can reproduce. Or you can
monitor on speakers with an extended low range and really feel those bottom string notes -
but make sure you're not distributing something that will distort on lesser systems. I
get the impression that you would quite like to have monitors that let you hear the full
bottom end. But why on earth does it matter if you achieve this with two large boxes or
two smaller boxes and one larger one?
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5624
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Edd M]
#923406 - 29/06/11 03:26 PM
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Look at where the pickups are on the bass (or a lead for that matter) you won't be picking
up much 31Hz!
Dave.
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4202
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: ef37a]
#923413 - 29/06/11 03:48 PM
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Quote ef37a:
Look at where the
pickups are on the bass (or a lead for that matter) you won't be picking up much 31Hz!
And remember that although
bassists love playing that bottom string, just about everyone else would rather prefer
they didn't :-)
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5624
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Exalted Wombat]
#924167 - 03/07/11 08:01 AM
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Morning E.W. "But why on earth does it matter if you achieve this with two large
boxes or two smaller boxes and one larger one?"
I actually think it does matter
quite a bit?
I am sure Hugh or another has covered this before but a single
subwoofer is always a compromise. The general advice is I seem to remember that getting
what LF you can from the monitors is better and spend the money there rather than a sub if
possible and the smaller the room the less useful a sub becomes.
There is, as I
understand things a very strong case for TWO subs to augment smaller speakers and these
should be placed as near to them as possible.
A refresher article perhaps SoS?
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Edd M
Joined: 29/05/09
Posts: 20
Loc: Darlington/Leeds, UK
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: ef37a]
#924192 - 03/07/11 10:38 AM
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Quote ef37a:
A refresher article
perhaps SoS?
I think that'd
be a really interesting (and informative) experiment actually, trying out different tops
with/without a sub and then with two, perhaps even dare for the 'centre' speaker often
found in surround but apply it to pop?
If I were to do it (...if money were no
object) it'd be interesting to try 2.0, 2.1, 2.2 then 3.0 3.1 3.2 and 3.3
Presumably having stereo subs would free panning choice for the low end entirely!
Although the centre monitors could be overkill. In pop anyway!
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5624
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Edd M]
#924310 - 04/07/11 06:33 AM
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Quote Edd M:
Quote ef37a:
A refresher
article perhaps SoS?
I think
that'd be a really interesting (and informative) experiment actually, trying out different
tops with/without a sub and then with two, perhaps even dare for the 'centre' speaker
often found in surround but apply it to pop?
If I were to do it (...if money
were no object) it'd be interesting to try 2.0, 2.1, 2.2 then 3.0 3.1 3.2 and 3.3
Presumably having stereo subs would free panning choice for the low end entirely!
Although the centre monitors could be overkill. In pop anyway!
Heh! I was not thinking along quite such
grandiose lines Edd! Just a page maybe on the pro and cons of subs in "small" rooms and
some guidance re positioning.
Still! A nice big article comparing the same
system in 3say, different "domestic" spaces would be very informative I would guess.
The room sizes I would suggest: Sub 900cu ft* 1200-1500cuft and ~2500+ for those
lucky B's with a nice old high ceilinged Victorian property?
If the results
came out to suggest that subs can never give good results in the average projjy bedroom,
(~1000cuft?) this might prove unpopular with some advertizers? And I suspect this might be
the case! *Cest moir! Be a lot of work, on a par I would say with the excellent
'07guitar mic'athon.
Dave.
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4202
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Edd M]
#924337 - 04/07/11 08:56 AM
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Are you edging towards suggesting that if a room is not large enough to contain a full
wavelength at a certain frequency, that frequency cannot be heard?
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5624
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Exalted Wombat]
#924339 - 04/07/11 09:07 AM
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Quote Exalted Wombat:
Are you
edging towards suggesting that if a room is not large enough to contain a full wavelength
at a certain frequency, that frequency cannot be heard?
Well, for any given frequency and any given
room there will be pressure nulls and peaks. Easy enough to run some sines and walk about
a bit! Then as rooms get smaller the amount of trapping begins to exceed the space
required by kit and person I understand!
Dave.
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Edd M
Joined: 29/05/09
Posts: 20
Loc: Darlington/Leeds, UK
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: ef37a]
#924358 - 04/07/11 10:35 AM
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Quote ef37a:
For those lucky B's
with a nice old high ceilinged Victorian property
...Like me? Win.
Quote ef37a:
Be a lot of work, on a par I would say with
the excellent '07guitar mic'athon.
I did something similar to the guitar mic'athon for an assignment last year, it
was excellent research!
If it were a one pager it would probably have to be
done in a standard size room me thinks, with good acoustics. Just to hear the difference
the subs make!
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5624
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: Edd M]
#924366 - 04/07/11 11:27 AM
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Quote Edd M:
Quote ef37a:
For those lucky
B's with a nice old high ceilinged Victorian property
...Like me? Win.
Quote ef37a:
Be a lot of work, on a par I would say with
the excellent '07guitar mic'athon.
I did something similar to the guitar mic'athon for an assignment last year, it
was excellent research!
If it were a one pager it would probably have to be
done in a standard size room me thinks, with good acoustics. Just to hear the difference
the subs make!
Nooo,
surely it would be best done in a small, C 1000cuft room with no specific treatment since
that is where the projjy noobs are coming from? THEN you can see how much trapping you
have to stuff in to make it work, if you can!
But try two subs first.MIGHT be
cheaper!
Dave.
Edited by ef37a (04/07/11 11:28 AM)
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. . . Delete This
Here be Dragons
Joined: 23/06/08
Posts: 3888
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Re: Is speaker frq. response of 49Hz good enough?
[Re: ef37a]
#924378 - 04/07/11 12:17 PM
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properly setting up two subs, is bloody fiddly.... and no, they might not simply go as
close as possible to the normal speakers.....
getting the smoothest most
balanced frequency response, basically requires a fair bit of fiddling about, even with
one sub... doing it with 2 is more complex yet...
and panning is perceptually
irrelevant at sub frequencies , LF down there is omni directional.
(we use 2 subs in our main monitoring rig, there are good reasons for doing so, and it
is far from being the compromised poor solution some seem to be implying..... )
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5624
Loc: northampton uk
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Quote Off duty BBQ lighter:
properly setting up two subs, is bloody fiddly.... and no, they might not simply go as
close as possible to the normal speakers.....
getting the smoothest most
balanced frequency response, basically requires a fair bit of fiddling about, even with
one sub... doing it with 2 is more complex yet...
and panning is perceptually
irrelevant at sub frequencies , LF down there is omni directional.
(we use 2 subs in our main monitoring rig, there are good reasons for doing so, and it
is far from being the compromised poor solution some seem to be implying..... )
Nope, not implying twin subs are a
"poor compromise" quite the reverse. They make abundant sense. Pure LF tone IS hard to
locate in a reasonably small room but any hint of a harmonic in the sub will announce its
presence, hence putting them close to the small speakers removes at least that problem.
But all this is the room's fault! Were it infinite in extent LF would not be
onidirectional!
Dave.
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