The Polk LSi15: Receiver Speaker Settings: LARGE or SMALL?

Bernal
Bernal Posts: 991
edited May 2010 in Speakers
Q1: ➜ How Should I set the:

◊ Main speakers - LARGE or SMALL
◊ Subwoofer - SUBWOOFER + LEF (120HZ) or MAIN or BOTH
◊ Center - LARGE or SMALL
◊ Surround - LARGE or SMALL

Q2:Which setting is correct and also will give best sound?

http://www.audyssey.com/blog/2009/05/small-vs-large/
http://www.polkaudio.com/homeaudio/lsi/specs.php
http://www.usa.denon.com/ProductDetails/3494.asp

Here is my system:

01) DENON AVR-4308CI: Advanced 7.1 CH/5.1+2 CH/ 3.1+2+2 CH A/V Home Theater /MultiMedia Multi-Source/Zone Receiver with Networking and WiFi/170 watts x 7 channels
02) SUNFIRE Grand Signature - Bob Carver's :D
03) OPPO DV-980H 1080p Up-Converting Universal DVD Player with HDMI and 7.1CH Audio
04) OPPO BDP-83 Blu-ray Disc Player w/SACD & DVD-Audio / DENON DVD-2500BTCI: Blu-ray Disc™ DVD/CD Digital Player/Transport
05) HITACHI P55T501. 55" HD1080 Plasma HDTV
06) POLKAUDIO LSiC (Center speaker) - 60 Hz.
07) POLKAUDIO LSi15 LEFT (Front speaker)
08) POLKAUDIO LSi15 RIGHT (Front speaker)
09) POLKAUDIO LSif/x LEFT (Surround speaker) 60 Hz.
10) POLKAUDIO LSif/x RIGHT (Surround speaker) [COLOR="rgb(139, 0, 0)"]60Hz[/COLOR].
11) VELODYNE OPTIMUN 12" :D (High Output Digital EQ SubWoofer 2400W/1200WRMS) 60Hz - LFE: 120Hz.
Post edited by Bernal on
«1

Comments

  • leroyjr1
    leroyjr1 Posts: 8,785
    edited October 2009
    With a good sub I'd say set your fronts to small crossed at 80hz. But if you do any two channel listening definately large without a sub sounds great.

    I run my fronts large/ full range to help out with the mid bass
  • vc69
    vc69 Posts: 2,500
    edited October 2009
    I run my front's large but I have a wimpy sub. Same reason as above.
    -Kevin
    HT: Philips 52PFL7432D 52" LCD 1080p / Onkyo TX-SR 606 / Oppo BDP-83 SE / Comcast cable. (all HDMI)B&W 801 - Front, Polk CS350 LS - Center, Polk LS90 - Rear
    2 Channel:
    Oppo BDP-83 SE
    Squeezebox Touch
    Muscial Fidelity M1 DAC
    VTL 2.5
    McIntosh 2205 (refurbed)
    B&W 801's
    Transparent IC's
  • jimmydep
    jimmydep Posts: 1,305
    edited October 2009
    Bernal, I have the same speakers as you with the exception of the sub I'm using A DSW-pro 600

    With a Yamaha Pre/pro, and an Emotiva / sunfire amp, my setting are

    Fronts- LSi-15's to large
    Center- LSIC to small
    Rears- LSiFX to small
    LFE sub crossover to 60hz
    Receiver set Sub + Mains (for 2 channel)

    I've played with several combinations, I like this best.

    LFE sub crossover at 80hz is my 2nd choice but a little too bass heavy, any higher and the bass is too disproportional.


    Try different settings, see which YOU like best.

    I'm learning that with the LSi15's, a minor change in placement can result in a big difference in sound........this is what this hobby is all about, trying different things.....the nice thing is, settings and speaker placement are FREEBIEES.

    Have fun

    Jimmy
  • pearsall001
    pearsall001 Posts: 5,094
    edited October 2009
    Here's agreat article on the subject...http://forum.ecoustics.com/bbs/messages/34579/128214.html. Once you get past the fact that the LSi15 aren't close to being full range, you'll understand the article. For some reason we tend to throw the word "Fullrange" around a lot & the truth is there are very few true Fullrange speakers out there. Think very, very, large & expensive to fall into that category.

    Play around with the settings & crossovers & let your ears decide. I'll bet the small setting crossed over at 60 or 80 is what you'll like. I know the Lsi15's sound very good without a sub but there's a whole lot you're missing not running a good sub with them. They're choking trying to act like a fullrange speaker.
    "2 Channel & 11.2 HT "Two Channel:Magnepan LRSSchiit Audio Freya S - SS preConsonance Ref 50 - Tube preParasound HALO A21+ 2 channel ampBluesound NODE 2i streameriFi NEO iDSD DAC Oppo BDP-93KEF KC62 sub Home Theater:Full blown 11.2 set up.
  • danz1906
    danz1906 Posts: 5,144
    edited October 2009
    Cross-over your speakers to 80hz for Movies and run your Fronts full range
    on Music.
    Linn AV5140 fronts
    Linn AV5120 Center
    Linn AV5140 Rears
    M&K MX-70 Sub for Music
    Odyssey Mono-Blocs
    SVS Ultra-13 Gloss Black:D
  • BlueFox
    BlueFox Posts: 15,251
    edited October 2009
    I have all 4 LSi15s set to large, as is the PSB Syncrony One Center. I do not use the LFE since I do not want the AVR filtering, and possibly degrading, the audio signal. The PSW1000 sub is run off the front pre-amp output. It is hard to describe how great this sounds. Sub integrates perfectly with LSi15s, and especially with BluRay audio, it is fantastic.
    Lumin X1 file player, Westminster Labs interconnect cable
    Sony XA-5400ES SACD; Pass XP-22 pre; X600.5 amps
    Magico S5 MKII Mcast Rose speakers; SPOD spikes

    Shunyata Triton v3/Typhon QR on source, Denali 2000 (2) on amps
    Shunyata Sigma XLR analog ICs, Sigma speaker cables
    Shunyata Sigma HC (2), Sigma Analog, Sigma Digital, Z Anaconda (3) power cables

    Mapleshade Samson V.3 four shelf solid maple rack, Micropoint brass footers
    Three 20 amp circuits.
  • apphd
    apphd Posts: 1,514
    edited October 2009
    xcapri79 wrote: »
    Given the spec. listed below, please explain why the LSi15 isn't full range?
    Overall Frequency Response 22Hz - 27kHz
    Lower -3dB Limit 30Hz
    Upper -3dB Limit 26kHz

    Did you read the acticle linked, or many others on this subject?

    One quote from this article:
    "Very few speakers should actually use the "large" setting. Even most of the big, powered towers should not be used with the "large" setting because they can't produce these low frequencies (or they produce them without power and depth). What you should be thinking is that "large" means you have a truly full-range speaker; use "small" for everything else. If your speaker can't put out more than 100dB at 20 Hz, set it to "small." "

    But like everything else in the audio world, and as has been said many times:
    Let your ears decide for you.
  • mantis
    mantis Posts: 17,204
    edited October 2009
    Here's agreat article on the subject...http://forum.ecoustics.com/bbs/messages/34579/128214.html. Once you get past the fact that the LSi15 aren't close to being full range, you'll understand the article. For some reason we tend to throw the word "Fullrange" around a lot & the truth is there are very few true Fullrange speakers out there. Think very, very, large & expensive to fall into that category.

    Play around with the settings & crossovers & let your ears decide. I'll bet the small setting crossed over at 60 or 80 is what you'll like. I know the Lsi15's sound very good without a sub but there's a whole lot you're missing not running a good sub with them. They're choking trying to act like a fullrange speaker.
    Excellent advise and an excellent link. Most people fall for full range or large speakers for fronts. Your system will actually sound fuller and clearer with all speakers set to small. Get over the ego and have a badass system. You will enjoy it more.
    Dan
    My personal quest is to save to world of bad audio, one thread at a time.
  • Toolfan66
    Toolfan66 Posts: 17,349
    edited October 2009
    I fell for it, I really thought I should have them set to large, and kept it that way for a few. I noticed a big change in my HT setup, everything blended better with the settings set to small.

    Take note to what is being said, these guys know their ****.
    Polk Audio SDA 2.3tl Fully Hot Rodded. 😎

    SVS SB16 X2

    Cary SLP-05/Ultimate Upgrade.
    Cary SA-500.1 ES Amps
    Cary DMS 800PV Network
    OPPO UDP 205/ModWright Modification
    VPI Scout TT / Dynavector 20x2
    Jolida JD9 Fully Modified

    VPI MW-1 Cyclone RCM

    MIT Shotgun 3 cables throughout / Except TT, and PC’s
  • Bernal
    Bernal Posts: 991
    edited October 2009
    Today update my Denon 4308Ci, and configure the speakers:

    ◊ Main speakers - LARGE,
    ◊ Center - SMALL - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ Surround - SMALL - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ Subwoofer - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ LFE (Low Frequency Effects) channel - crossover to 120Hz.

    What is your opinion? I will listen ...
  • McLoki
    McLoki Posts: 5,231
    edited October 2009
    I run mine as all small with an 80hz crossover. (no double bass)

    Basically for home theater, you should only set your speakers to large if they have better bass output (goes lower and at a higher level) than your subwoofer. If it does, set the speaker to large and start saving for a better sub.

    Michael
    Mains.............Polk LSi15 (Cherry)
    Center............Polk LSiC (Crossover upgraded)
    Surrounds.......Polk LSi7 (Gloss Black - wood sides removed and crossovers upgraded)
    Subwoofers.....SVS 25-31 CS+ and PC+ (both 20hz tune)
    Pre\Pro...........NAD T163 (Modded with LM4562 opamps)
    Amplifier.........Cinepro 3k6 (6-channel, 500wpc@4ohms)
  • megasat16
    megasat16 Posts: 3,521
    edited October 2009
    Set LSi15 to Large and Sub output to Both! Experiment Subwoofer and LFE Crossover Frequency between 60-80Hz and play with it. Use the best setting that works well in your room.

    If your sub has adjustable Low Pass Filter, set it a bit more than 80Hz (such as 90Hz or 100Hz).
    Trying out Different Audio Cables is a Religious Affair. You don't discuss it with anyone. :redface::biggrin:
  • comfortablycurt
    comfortablycurt Posts: 6,745
    edited October 2009
    I've went back and forth between both methods several times...with several pairs of speakers.

    For HT usage...it's basically always going to sound better with the fronts set to small. I've got all of my speakers crossed over at 80 hz, with the subs LPF set at 120 hz...blends beautifully. With the fronts set to large it can add a huge over emphasis in the bass regions.
    The nirvana inducer-
    APC H10 Power Conditioner
    Marantz UD5005 universal player
    Parasound Halo P5 preamp
    Parasound HCA-1200II power amp
    PolkAudio LSi9's/PolkAudio SDA 2A's/PolkAudio Monitor 7A's
    Audioquest Speaker Cables and IC's
  • mantis
    mantis Posts: 17,204
    edited October 2009
    Bernal wrote: »
    Today update my Denon 4308Ci, and configure the speakers:

    ◊ Main speakers - LARGE,
    ◊ Center - SMALL - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ Surround - SMALL - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ Subwoofer - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ LFE (Low Frequency Effects) channel - crossover to 120Hz.

    What is your opinion? I will listen ...

    Set the LFE out to 60hz , set the fronts to small 60hz. I would rather you set everything to 80hz but it will work good at 60 2. I had the same speaker setup and went back and forth with 60hz and 80hz. They both work very well but I remember ending up at 80hz for a final.
    Dan
    My personal quest is to save to world of bad audio, one thread at a time.
  • danz1906
    danz1906 Posts: 5,144
    edited October 2009
    mantis wrote: »
    Set the LFE out to 60hz , set the fronts to small 60hz. I would rather you set everything to 80hz but it will work good at 60 2. I had the same speaker setup and went back and forth with 60hz and 80hz. They both work very well but I remember ending up at 80hz for a final.

    Agreed, 80hz always seem to work for me.
    Linn AV5140 fronts
    Linn AV5120 Center
    Linn AV5140 Rears
    M&K MX-70 Sub for Music
    Odyssey Mono-Blocs
    SVS Ultra-13 Gloss Black:D
  • McLoki
    McLoki Posts: 5,231
    edited October 2009
    mantis wrote: »
    Set the LFE out to 60hz , set the fronts to small 60hz. I would rather you set everything to 80hz but it will work good at 60 2. I had the same speaker setup and went back and forth with 60hz and 80hz. They both work very well but I remember ending up at 80hz for a final.

    I agree with everything except setting the LFE at 60hz. It should be set at 120hz (or higher) always. There is information contained in the LFE channel up to 120hz. (that if truncated will not get directed anywhere else while you have a sub in the system.)

    Michael
    Mains.............Polk LSi15 (Cherry)
    Center............Polk LSiC (Crossover upgraded)
    Surrounds.......Polk LSi7 (Gloss Black - wood sides removed and crossovers upgraded)
    Subwoofers.....SVS 25-31 CS+ and PC+ (both 20hz tune)
    Pre\Pro...........NAD T163 (Modded with LM4562 opamps)
    Amplifier.........Cinepro 3k6 (6-channel, 500wpc@4ohms)
  • apphd
    apphd Posts: 1,514
    edited October 2009
    xcapri79 wrote: »
    This sounds like an exaggeration.
    How many Polk Audio subwoofers can actually do this?

    For example
    Overall Frequency Response
    DSW microPRO 1000 22-200 Hz
    DSW microPRO 2000 22-200 Hz
    DSW Pro 400 25Hz - 160Hz
    DSW Pro 500 23Hz - 160Hz
    DSW Pro 600 20Hz - 160Hz

    I think the bigger question is how many main/tower speakers can put out <30 Hz with any authority. Also this is one of the reasons (deserving or not) that Polk subs were never a favorite for many people.

    Remember we are talking HT, and as you see from many posts LSi 15 owners do indeed prefer the large setting. The article and others have explained why, on average it should be small, but..... different rooms, different gear, different ears, different taste.......

    2 ch/music is much different, for many many years 90% of home users relied on nothing more than 2 speakers, and were very very happy, but bass has always been one of the more difficult to do well.
  • pearsall001
    pearsall001 Posts: 5,094
    edited October 2009
    xcapri79 wrote: »
    Given the spec. listed below, please explain why the LSi15 isn't full range?
    Overall Frequency Response 22Hz - 27kHz
    Lower -3dB Limit 30Hz
    Upper -3dB Limit 26kHz

    Small driver surface area, lack of cabinet air volumn, most likely a lack of power...to produce deep, powerfull bass you need good clean power, & lots of it. Tweeter, mid-bass & bass drivers all competing within the same cabinet. Crossover points muck things up a bit. You just can't expect everything crammed into a single box to do all things properly. Laws of physics & science. The same as the AVR vs separates argument...the AVR has everything crammed into a single box, so one can expect that something has to give. Whereas separates are designed for a single purpose only. And specs are easy to fudge according to what the manufacture wants them to say. Do alot of AVR & power amp ratings come to mind....eek!!!!
    "2 Channel & 11.2 HT "Two Channel:Magnepan LRSSchiit Audio Freya S - SS preConsonance Ref 50 - Tube preParasound HALO A21+ 2 channel ampBluesound NODE 2i streameriFi NEO iDSD DAC Oppo BDP-93KEF KC62 sub Home Theater:Full blown 11.2 set up.
  • mantis
    mantis Posts: 17,204
    edited October 2009
    McLoki wrote: »
    I agree with everything except setting the LFE at 60hz. It should be set at 120hz (or higher) always. There is information contained in the LFE channel up to 120hz. (that if truncated will not get directed anywhere else while you have a sub in the system.)

    Michael

    I did not know that. Can you post in detail this info or a link I can go read? I thought the 81hz and higher always went to the main channels for reproduction. I never thought to send those signals to a subwoofer. Interesting , but wouldn't 81hz to 120hz equate to localization?
    Thanks,
    Dan
    My personal quest is to save to world of bad audio, one thread at a time.
  • McLoki
    McLoki Posts: 5,231
    edited October 2009
    mantis wrote: »
    I did not know that. Can you post in detail this info or a link I can go read? I thought the 81hz and higher always went to the main channels for reproduction. I never thought to send those signals to a subwoofer. Interesting , but wouldn't 81hz to 120hz equate to localization?
    Thanks,

    Sure - easy to get confused on it. (and remember I said - if you have a subwoofer in your system - if you have sub set to off or no and fronts set to large - I belive the LFE channel IS redirected to the fronts. If sub is set to on though (with no sub hooked up) and all speakers set to large - you will be missing quite a bit of bass in many movies. (since the LFE channel will not go anywhere))...

    Here is an article in UltimateAVmag. "Bass Management and the LFE Channel"

    Here is something from Secrets (back when they actually did decent reporting..) "The Misunderstood 0.1 LFE Channel in 5.1 Digital Surround Sound"

    And here is an article from Dolby explaining the LFE channel

    That should be enough to give you ideas of what else to search on. :)

    Happy Reading.

    Michael
    Mains.............Polk LSi15 (Cherry)
    Center............Polk LSiC (Crossover upgraded)
    Surrounds.......Polk LSi7 (Gloss Black - wood sides removed and crossovers upgraded)
    Subwoofers.....SVS 25-31 CS+ and PC+ (both 20hz tune)
    Pre\Pro...........NAD T163 (Modded with LM4562 opamps)
    Amplifier.........Cinepro 3k6 (6-channel, 500wpc@4ohms)
  • mantis
    mantis Posts: 17,204
    edited October 2009
    McLoki wrote: »
    Sure - easy to get confused on it. (and remember I said - if you have a subwoofer in your system - if you have sub set to off or no and fronts set to large - I belive the LFE channel IS redirected to the fronts. If sub is set to on though (with no sub hooked up) and all speakers set to large - you will be missing quite a bit of bass in many movies. (since the LFE channel will not go anywhere))...

    Here is an article in UltimateAVmag. "Bass Management and the LFE Channel"

    Here is something from Secrets (back when they actually did decent reporting..) "The Misunderstood 0.1 LFE Channel in 5.1 Digital Surround Sound"

    And here is an article from Dolby explaining the LFE channel

    That should be enough to give you ideas of what else to search on. :)

    Happy Reading.

    Michael

    Cool thanks, I'm getting my read on.
    Dan
    My personal quest is to save to world of bad audio, one thread at a time.
  • Bernal
    Bernal Posts: 991
    edited October 2009
    McLoki wrote: »
    I agree with everything except setting the LFE at 60hz. It should be set at 120hz (or higher) always. There is information contained in the LFE channel up to 120hz. (that if truncated will not get directed anywhere else while you have a sub in the system.)

    Michael

    McLoki wrote: »
    Sure - easy to get confused on it. (and remember I said - if you have a subwoofer in your system - if you have sub set to off or no and fronts set to large - I belive the LFE channel IS redirected to the fronts. If sub is set to on though (with no sub hooked up) and all speakers set to large - you will be missing quite a bit of bass in many movies. (since the LFE channel will not go anywhere))...

    Here is an article in UltimateAVmag. "Bass Management and the LFE Channel"

    Here is something from Secrets (back when they actually did decent reporting..) "The Misunderstood 0.1 LFE Channel in 5.1 Digital Surround Sound"

    And here is an article from Dolby explaining the LFE channel

    That should be enough to give you ideas of what else to search on. :)

    Happy Reading.

    Michael

    Hi,
    Excellent information :). The theme of LFE channel was initially difficult. There is much confusion with the crossing of the subwoofer.

    ✓ In his opinion, go well with my setup:

    ◊ Main speakers - LARGE,
    ◊ Center - SMALL - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ Surround - SMALL - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ Subwoofer - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ LFE (Low Frequency Effects) channel - crossover to 120Hz.


    ;)

    ✍ Here is my system:⇓

    01) DENON AVR-4308CI: Advanced 7.1 CH/5.1+2 CH/ 3.1+2+2 CH A/V Home Theater /MultiMedia Multi-Source/Zone Receiver with Networking and WiFi/170 watts x 7 channels
    02) SUNFIRE Grand Signature - Bob Carver's
    03) OPPO DV-980H 1080p Up-Converting Universal DVD Player with HDMI and 7.1CH Audio
    04) OPPO BDP-83 Blu-ray Disc Player w/SACD & DVD-Audio / DENON DVD-2500BTCI: Blu-ray Disc™ DVD/CD Digital Player/Transport
    05) HITACHI P55T501. 55" HD1080 Plasma HDTV
    06) POLKAUDIO LSiC (Center speaker),
    07) POLKAUDIO LSi15 LEFT (Front speaker)
    08) POLKAUDIO LSi15 RIGHT (Front speaker)
    09) POLKAUDIO LSif/x LEFT (Surround speaker),
    10) POLKAUDIO LSif/x RIGHT (Surround speaker).
    11) VELODYNE OPTIMUN 12" (High Output Digital EQ SubWoofer 2400W/1200WRMS).
  • pearsall001
    pearsall001 Posts: 5,094
    edited October 2009
    xcapri79 wrote: »
    I quoted the LSi15 specs. from Polk Audio.
    Are you saying that Polk Audio is fudging their specs????
    The point I made is that LSi15's are powered by separate amps with plenty of power. I see no reason to set them to small in that case. Recommendations that apply to AVR using the built-in amps would not necessarily be the same vs separates. The THX recommendation to set all speakers to small with an 80Hz crossover doesn't always apply.

    Remember the topic here is the Polk Audio LSi15 and not everything else.

    If you honestly believe that the 15's are capable of "Real" fullrange performance then by all means enjoy! The only thing that matters in this crazy hobby is what makes sense to you. Bottom line...enjoy the music!!!
    "2 Channel & 11.2 HT "Two Channel:Magnepan LRSSchiit Audio Freya S - SS preConsonance Ref 50 - Tube preParasound HALO A21+ 2 channel ampBluesound NODE 2i streameriFi NEO iDSD DAC Oppo BDP-93KEF KC62 sub Home Theater:Full blown 11.2 set up.
  • megasat16
    megasat16 Posts: 3,521
    edited October 2009
    For THX system, LFE shouldn't be set too high. LFE channel has brick wall filter of 120Hz but bass over 80Hz is starting to be directional and I think some people can hear where it's coming from.

    Also, male voices can be down to 80Hz-120Hz region and your sub will be playing human voices if the LFE channel has these voices encoded accidentally (though not very likely).

    Setting LFE to 120Hz ensure all bass recorded in LFE will be played though your sub but THX standard calls for setting it to 80Hz.

    Anyway, play with it and use what is best in your room.
    Trying out Different Audio Cables is a Religious Affair. You don't discuss it with anyone. :redface::biggrin:
  • Bernal
    Bernal Posts: 991
    edited October 2009
    mantis wrote: »
    I did not know that. Can you post in detail this info or a link I can go read? I thought the 81hz and higher always went to the main channels for reproduction. I never thought to send those signals to a subwoofer. Interesting , but wouldn't 81hz to 120hz equate to localization?
    Thanks,


    What is the LFE (.1) Channel?:
    http://www.genelecusa.com/faq/multichannel/lfe-channel/
  • Bernal
    Bernal Posts: 991
    edited October 2009
    McLoki wrote: »
    I run mine as all small with an 80hz crossover. (no double bass)

    Basically for home theater, you should only set your speakers to large if they have better bass output (goes lower and at a higher level) than your subwoofer. If it does, set the speaker to large and start saving for a better sub.

    Michael
    ¿ Best Subwoofer...?
    I Have Velodyne Optimum 12
    Optimum_single%20sub_s.jpg

    http://www.velodyne.com/products/specs/OptimumSpecs.html


    Velodyne do you think about?.

    ;)
  • Bernal
    Bernal Posts: 991
    edited October 2009
    McLoki wrote: »
    Sure - easy to get confused on it. (and remember I said - if you have a subwoofer in your system - if you have sub set to off or no and fronts set to large - I belive the LFE channel IS redirected to the fronts. If sub is set to on though (with no sub hooked up) and all speakers set to large - you will be missing quite a bit of bass in many movies. (since the LFE channel will not go anywhere))...

    Here is an article in UltimateAVmag. "Bass Management and the LFE Channel"

    Here is something from Secrets (back when they actually did decent reporting..) "The Misunderstood 0.1 LFE Channel in 5.1 Digital Surround Sound"

    And here is an article from Dolby explaining the LFE channel

    That should be enough to give you ideas of what else to search on. :)

    Happy Reading.

    Michael




    Hi,
    Excellent information :). The theme of LFE channel was initially difficult. There is much confusion with the crossing of the subwoofer.

    ✓ In his opinion, go well with my setup:

    ◊ Main speakers - LARGE,
    ◊ Center - SMALL - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ Surround - SMALL - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ Subwoofer - crossover to 60 Hz,
    ◊ LFE (Low Frequency Effects) channel - crossover to 120Hz.


    ;)

    ✍ Here is my system:⇓

    01) DENON AVR-4308CI: Advanced 7.1 CH/5.1+2 CH/ 3.1+2+2 CH A/V Home Theater /MultiMedia Multi-Source/Zone Receiver with Networking and WiFi/170 watts x 7 channels
    02) SUNFIRE Grand Signature - Bob Carver's
    03) OPPO DV-980H 1080p Up-Converting Universal DVD Player with HDMI and 7.1CH Audio
    04) OPPO BDP-83 Blu-ray Disc Player w/SACD & DVD-Audio / DENON DVD-2500BTCI: Blu-ray Disc™ DVD/CD Digital Player/Transport
    05) HITACHI P55T501. 55" HD1080 Plasma HDTV
    06) POLKAUDIO LSiC (Center speaker),
    07) POLKAUDIO LSi15 LEFT (Front speaker)
    08) POLKAUDIO LSi15 RIGHT (Front speaker)
    09) POLKAUDIO LSif/x LEFT (Surround speaker),
    10) POLKAUDIO LSif/x RIGHT (Surround speaker).
    11) VELODYNE OPTIMUN 12" (High Output Digital EQ SubWoofer 2400W/1200WRMS).
  • LandShark
    LandShark Posts: 130
    edited October 2009
    Question...On the Onkyo TX705 there's another LFE setting under several different sound-stages. For example under DTS-Master Audio there's a setting to change the LFE from 0 to -10, -20 and ∞. What does this LFE setting have to do with the other if anything?

    TV: Samsung LN40A550
    Mains: Polk Monitor 70's
    Center: Polk CS2
    Surrounds: Polk OWM3's
    Receiver: Onkyo TX sr705
    BDP: Sony S350
    Subs: Velodyne VRP1200 and VRP1000
    Monster Power Conditioner EP IR 2450
  • Monster Jam
    Monster Jam Posts: 919
    edited October 2009
    Large (and in charge).
    Do you hear that buzzing noise? :confused:
  • Bernal
    Bernal Posts: 991
    edited October 2009
    LandShark wrote: »
    Question...On the Onkyo TX705 there's another LFE setting under several different sound-stages. For example under DTS-Master Audio there's a setting to change the LFE from 0 to -10, -20 and ∞. What does this LFE setting have to do with the other if anything?

    LFE
    Adjust the low-frequency effects level (LFE).
    [Variable range] –10dB ~0dB

    For proper playback of the different program sources, we recommend
    setting to the values below.
    • Dolby Digital sources: “0 dB”
    • DTS movie sources: “0 dB”
    • DTS music sources: “-10 dB”