Subwoofer and room size

Lowell_M
Lowell_M Posts: 1,660
edited April 2006 in Speakers
I am guessing there is an obvious answer to this question, but I have found out that some of my other HT assumptions havent been right.......

Right now I have a Velodyne CHT-120 for my home theater which currenty is in my living room. I have an open floor plan with about a 700 square feet footprint and 8 foot ceilings. Toward the side of the room opposite to the living room, the foyer opens up into the second floor loft that is another 300 sq feet or so, plus all of the open space in the foyer.

I am going to move the HT to my basement (when I finally get the drywall hung), which will be roughly 400 sq feet finished with 7 1/2' ceiling.

This is probably too general a question, but based on cubic feet of the upstairs vs. the basement, should I see much of a change in subwoofer performance?

OH...and...one more day until I get my new receiver! still can't wait......
HT
RTi70 mains
CSi30 center
RTi28 Rears
Velodyne CHT-12
H/K AVR-247
ADCOM GFA-7000
Samsung PN58B860
Playstation 3

2-Channel
Polk Audio LSi15's
Rotel RCD-1072
Nakamichi CA-5 Pre
ADCOM GFA-555
Signal Cable Analog II IC's
Signal Ultra Bi-Wire Speaker Cables
Post edited by Lowell_M on

Comments

  • michael_w
    michael_w Posts: 2,813
    edited April 2006
    It will probably change quite a bit. You'll might notice it's easier to fill the room and you don't have to make the sub work as hard. It's really difficult to predict how it will sound from one room to the next without actually seeing it or knowing where it's going.

    I noticed a huge improvement moving my sub from downstairs into my room. I went from an open living room with open spaces to the whole downstairs to a 100 square foot sealed room ;) It could have been because there isn't anywhere to put the sub in a good spot downstairs, but I'm asuming the smaller room helped a lot.
  • Zen Dragon
    Zen Dragon Posts: 501
    edited April 2006
    It is likely your bass will be more present in the new space. With it being a smaller space without adjacent openings to other spaces.
    Also basements also frequently have a concrete floor which provide a somewhat harder reflective surface than a wooden floor.
    The Family
    Polk SDA-1C's
    Polk SDA-2
    Polk Monitor 10B's
    Polk LSI-9's
    Polk Monitor 5's
    Polk 5 jr's
    Polk PSW-450 Sub
    Polk CSI40 Center

    Do not one day come to die, and discover you have not lived.
    This is pretty f***ed up right here.
  • Early B.
    Early B. Posts: 7,900
    edited April 2006
    Doesn't matter. You'll still need lots more sub to fill a 400 s.f. basement adequately.
    HT/2-channel Rig: Sony 50” LCD TV; Toshiba HD-A2 DVD player; Emotiva LMC-1 pre/pro; Rogue Audio M-120 monoblocks (modded); Placette RVC; Emotiva LPA-1 amp; Bada HD-22 tube CDP (modded); VMPS Tower II SE (fronts); DIY Clearwave Dynamic 4CC (center); Wharfedale Opus Tri-Surrounds (rear); and VMPS 215 sub

    "God grooves with tubes."
  • Lowell_M
    Lowell_M Posts: 1,660
    edited April 2006
    Early B. wrote:
    Doesn't matter. You'll still need lots more sub to fill a 400 s.f. basement adequately.

    Really?...Crap. I was looking forward to some kick **** bass. I haven't had any other sub in my system so don't know any different. Right now bass response in movies is pretty good (room shaking, even) in the listening positions although I have the sub output on the receiver turned up to +7 and the sub gain around 60%. Away from the couch and chairs toward the kitchen and foyer, though, bass drops off a bit.
    HT
    RTi70 mains
    CSi30 center
    RTi28 Rears
    Velodyne CHT-12
    H/K AVR-247
    ADCOM GFA-7000
    Samsung PN58B860
    Playstation 3

    2-Channel
    Polk Audio LSi15's
    Rotel RCD-1072
    Nakamichi CA-5 Pre
    ADCOM GFA-555
    Signal Cable Analog II IC's
    Signal Ultra Bi-Wire Speaker Cables
  • michael_w
    michael_w Posts: 2,813
    edited April 2006
    You have a large room but the cht-12 is a pretty decent sub. I'd give it a shot before coming to any conclusions. If you're happy with it now I'm sure it'll do just fine in a much smaller room.