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Old 08-23-2013, 08:40 PM   #3
srinivas1015 srinivas1015 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tommyboy81 View Post
You want the bass to sound as full as can be in the room. To me, having stuff like pictures, glasses and windows means its too hot. Which to some it's a plus. But not to a point where its boomy.

You shouldn't really feel yourself vibrate. Subs that go below 20Hz will punch you in the chest.

Mine goes down to 24Hz and with the low stuff I can feel the pressure in the room rise. My ears can feel it. If you want to feel the shaking their are products out there that can help. Like Buttkickers

Their others here with more knowledge than me.
Exactly, I can feel the pressure increase. I thought I was doing something wrong as I've never felt vibrations. The only way it happened today was I put the sub a few inches next to the sofa and increased the dB level of the sub by 4 points. But this screwed up everything else and it got annoying once the gimmick factor wore off.

My local Multiplex's LFE literally shakes the chairs as if there's an earthquake of 5 on the Richter scale! I didn't like this that much as the LFE didn't 'blend' well with the speakers. Is this how they're supposed to sound or is a good sub only supposed to increase the air pressure?
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