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Wikipedia

Subwoofer

A subwoofer (or sub) is a loudspeaker designed to reproduce low-pitched audio frequencies known as bass and sub-bass, lower in frequency than those which can be (optimally) generated by a woofer. The typical frequency range for a subwoofer is about 20–200 Hz for consumer products,[1] below 100 Hz for professional live sound,[2] and below 80 Hz in THX-certified systems.[3] Subwoofers are never used alone, as they are intended to augment the low-frequency range of loudspeakers that cover the higher frequency bands. While the term "subwoofer" technically only refers to the speaker driver, in common parlance, the term often refers to a subwoofer driver mounted in a speaker enclosure (cabinet), often with a built-in amplifier.

12-inch (30 cm) subwoofer driver (loudspeaker). A driver is commonly installed in an enclosure (often a wooden cabinet) to prevent the sound waves coming off the back of the driver diaphragm from canceling out the sound waves being generated from the front of the subwoofer.
A typical Hi-Fi subwoofer (r.), with the subwoofer loudspeaker built into a cabinet. On the left, a version with transparent cabinet is shown where the large magnet (grayish colour) of the speaker driver can be seen in the middle, close to the brown damper.

Subwoofers are made up of one or more woofers mounted in a loudspeaker enclosure—often made of wood—capable of withstanding air pressure while resisting deformation. Subwoofer enclosures come in a variety of designs, including bass reflex (with a port or vent), using a subwoofer and one or more passive radiator speakers in the enclosure, acoustic suspension (sealed enclosure), infinite baffle, horn-loaded, tapped horn, transmission line, bandpass or isobaric designs. Each design has unique trade-offs with respect to efficiency, low-frequency range, cabinet size and cost. Passive subwoofers have a subwoofer driver and enclosure and they are powered by an external amplifier. Active subwoofers include a built-in amplifier.[4]

The first home audio subwoofers were developed in the 1960s to add bass response to home stereo systems. Subwoofers came into greater popular consciousness in the 1970s with the introduction of Sensurround in movies such as Earthquake, which produced loud low-frequency sounds through large subwoofers. With the advent of the compact cassette and the compact disc in the 1980s, the reproduction of deep and loud bass was no longer limited by the ability of a phonograph record stylus to track a groove,[5] and producers could add more low-frequency content to recordings. As well, during the 1990s, DVDs were increasingly recorded with "surround sound" processes that included a low-frequency effects (LFE) channel, which could be heard using the subwoofer in home theater systems. During the 1990s, subwoofers also became increasingly popular in home stereo systems, custom car audio installations, and in PA systems. By the 2000s, subwoofers became almost universal in sound reinforcement systems in nightclubs and concert venues.

History

 
View of the underside of the downward-firing Infinity Servo Statik 1, showing the size of the 18-inch (45 cm) custom-wound Cerwin-Vega driver in relation to a can of Diet Coke, to show scale.

1920s to 1950s precursors

From about 1900 to the 1950s, the "lowest frequency in practical use" in recordings, broadcasting and music playback was 100 Hz.[6] When sound was developed for motion pictures, the basic RCA sound system was a single 8-inch (20.3 cm) speaker mounted in straight horn, an approach which was deemed unsatisfactory by Hollywood decisionmakers, who hired Western Electric engineers to develop a better speaker system.[7] The early Western Electric experiments added a set of 18-inch drivers for the low end in a large, open-backed baffle (extending the range down to 50 Hz) and a high-frequency unit, but MGM was not pleased with the sound of the three-way system, as they had concerns about the delay between the different drivers.[7]

In 1933, the head of MGM's sound department, Douglas Shearer, worked with John Hilliard and James B. Lansing (who would later found Altec Lansing in 1941 and JBL in 1946) to develop a new speaker system that used a two-way enclosure with a W-shaped bass horn that could go as low as 40 Hz.[7] The Shearing-Lansing 500-A ended up being used in "screening rooms, dubbing theaters, and early sound reinforcement".[7] In the late 1930s, Lansing created a smaller two-way speaker with a 15-inch (38 cm) woofer in a vented enclosure, which he called the Iconic system; it was used as a studio monitor and in high-end home hi-fi set-ups.[7]

During the 1940s swing era, to get deeper bass, "pipelike opening[s]" were cut into speaker enclosures, creating bass reflex enclosures, as it was found that even a fairly inexpensive speaker enclosure, once modified in this way, could "transmit the driving power of a heavy...drumbeat—and sometimes not much else—to a crowded dancefloor."[6] Prior to the development of the first subwoofers, woofers were used to reproduce bass frequencies, usually with a crossover point set at 500 Hz and a 4-inch (10 cm) loudspeaker in an infinite baffle or in professional sound applications, a "hybrid horn-loaded" bass reflex enclosure (such as the 15-inch Altec Lansing A-7 enclosure nicknamed the "Voice of the Theater", which was introduced in 1946).[8] In the mid-1950s, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences selected the "big, boxy" Altec A-7 as the industry standard for movie sound reproduction in theaters.[9]

1960s: first subwoofers

In September 1964, Raymon Dones, of El Cerrito, California, received the first patent for a subwoofer specifically designed to augment omnidirectionally the low frequency range of modern stereo systems (US patent 3150739). It was able to reproduce distortion-free low frequencies down to 15 cycles per second (15 Hz). A specific objective of Dones's invention was to provide portable sound enclosures capable of high fidelity reproduction of low frequency sound waves without giving an audible indication of the direction from which they emanated. Dones's loudspeaker was marketed in the US under the trade name "The Octavium"[10] from the early 1960s to the mid-1970s. The Octavium was utilized by several recording artists of that era, most notably the Grateful Dead, bassist Monk Montgomery, bassist Nathan East, and the Pointer Sisters. The Octavium speaker and Dones's subwoofer technology were also utilized, in a few select theaters, to reproduce low pitch frequencies for the 1974 blockbuster movie Earthquake. During the late 1960s, Dones's Octavium was favorably reviewed by audiophile publications including Hi-Fi News and Audio Magazine.

Another early subwoofer enclosure made for home and studio use was the separate bass speaker for the Servo Statik 1 by New Technology Enterprises.[11] Designed as a prototype in 1966 by physicist Arnold Nudell and airline pilot Cary Christie in Nudell's garage, it used a second winding around a custom Cerwin-Vega 18-inch (45 cm) driver to provide servo control information to the amplifier, and it was offered for sale at $1795, some 40% more expensive than any other complete loudspeaker listed at Stereo Review.[11] In 1968, the two found outside investors and reorganized as Infinity.[11] The subwoofer was reviewed positively in Stereophile magazine's winter 1968 issue as the SS-1 by Infinity. The SS-1 received very good reviews in 1970 from High Fidelity magazine.[11]

 
A display of Cerwin-Vega speaker enclosures at the 1975 Audio Engineering Society meeting.

Another of the early subwoofers was developed during the late 1960s by Ken Kreisel, the former president of the Miller & Kreisel Sound Corporation in Los Angeles. When Kreisel's business partner, Jonas Miller, who owned a high-end audio store in Los Angeles, told Kreisel that some purchasers of the store's high-end electrostatic speakers had complained about a lack of bass response in the electrostatics, Kreisel designed a powered woofer that would reproduce only those frequencies that were too low for the electrostatic speakers to convey.[12] Infinity's full range electrostatic speaker system that was developed during the 1960s also used a woofer to cover the lower frequency range that its electrostatic arrays did not handle adequately.

1970s to 1980s

The first use of a subwoofer in a recording session was in 1973 for mixing the Steely Dan album Pretzel Logic, when recording engineer Roger Nichols arranged for Kreisel to bring a prototype of his subwoofer to Village Recorders.[13] Further design modifications were made by Kreisel over the next ten years, and in the 1970s and 1980s by engineer John P. D'Arcy; record producer Daniel Levitin served as a consultant and "golden ears" for the design of the crossover network (used to partition the frequency spectrum so that the subwoofer would not attempt to reproduce frequencies too high for its effective range, and so that the main speakers would not need to handle frequencies too low for their effective range). In 1976, Kreisel created the first satellite speakers and subwoofer system, named "David and Goliath".[14]

Subwoofers received a great deal of publicity in 1974 with the movie Earthquake, which was released in Sensurround. Initially installed in 17 U.S. theaters, the Cerwin-Vega "Sensurround" system used large subwoofers that were driven by racks of 500 watt amplifiers, triggered by control tones printed on one of the audio tracks on the film. Four of the subwoofers were positioned in front of the audience under (or behind) the film screen and two more were placed together at the rear of the audience on a platform. Powerful noise energy and loud rumbling in the range of 17 to 120 Hz were generated at the level of 110–120 decibels of sound pressure level, abbreviated dB(SPL). The new low frequency entertainment method helped the film become a box office success. More Sensurround systems were assembled and installed. By 1976, there were almost 300 Sensurround systems leapfrogging through select theaters. Other films to use the effect include the WW II naval battle epic Midway in 1976 and Rollercoaster in 1977.[15]

For owners of 33 rpm LPs and 45 rpm singles, loud and deep bass was limited by the ability of the phonograph record stylus to track the groove.[5] While some hi-fi aficionados had solved the problem by using other playback sources, such as reel-to-reel tape players which were capable of delivering accurate, naturally deep bass from acoustic sources, or synthetic bass not found in nature, with the popular introduction of the compact cassette in the late 1960s it became possible to add more low frequency content to recordings.[16] By the mid-1970s, 12-inch vinyl singles, which allowed for "more bass volume", were used to record disco, reggae, dub and hip-hop tracks; dance club DJs played these records in clubs with subwoofers to achieve "physical and emotional" reactions from dancers.[17]

In the early 1970s, David Mancuso hired sound engineer Alex Rosner[18] to design additional subwoofers for his disco dance events, along with "tweeter arrays" to "boost the treble and bass at opportune moments" at his private, underground parties at The Loft.[19] The demand for sub-bass sound reinforcement in the 1970s was driven by the important role of "powerful bass drum" in disco, as compared with rock and pop; to provide this deeper range, a third crossover point from 40 to 120 Hz (centering on 80 Hz) was added.[8] The Paradise Garage discotheque in New York City, which operated from 1977 to 1987, had "custom designed 'sub-bass' speakers" developed by Alex Rosner's disciple, sound engineer Richard ("Dick") Long[18] that were called "Levan Horns" (in honor of resident DJ Larry Levan).[17]

By the end of the 1970s, subwoofers were used in dance venue sound systems to enable the playing of "[b]ass-heavy dance music" that we "do not 'hear' with our ears but with our entire body".[19] At the club, Long used four Levan bass horns, one in each corner of the dancefloor, to create a "haptic and tactile quality" in the sub-bass that you could feel in your body.[20] To overcome the lack of sub-bass frequencies on 1970s disco records (sub-bass frequencies below 60 Hz were removed during mastering), Long added a DBX 100 "Boom Box" subharmonic pitch generator into his system to synthesize 25 to 50 Hz sub-bass from the 50 to 100 Hz bass on the records.[20]

By the later 1970s, disco club sound engineers were using the same large Cerwin-Vega Sensurround-style folded horn subwoofers that were used in Earthquake and similar movies in dance club system installations.[8] In the early 1980s, Long designed a sound system for the Warehouse dance club, with "huge stacks of subwoofers" which created "deep and intense" bass frequencies that "pound[ed] through your system" and "entire body", enabling clubgoers to "viscerally experience" the DJs' house music mixes.[21]

 
A crew sets up a sound system, including large bass bins, in Jamaica in 2009.

In Jamaica in the 1970s and 1980s, sound engineers for reggae sound systems began creating "heavily customized" subwoofer enclosures by adding foam and tuning the cabinets to achieve "rich and articulate speaker output below 100 Hz".[22] The sound engineers who developed the "bass-heavy signature sound" of sound reinforcement systems have been called "deserving as much credit for the sound of Jamaican music as their better-known music producer cousins".[23] The sound engineers for Stone Love Movement (a sound system crew), for example, modified folded horn subwoofers they imported from the US to get more of a bass reflex sound that suited local tone preferences for dancehall audiences, as the unmodified folded horn was found to be "too aggressive" sounding and "not deep enough for Jamaican listeners".[22]

In sound system culture, there are both "low and high bass bins" in "towering piles" that are "delivered in large trucks" and set up by a crew of "box boys", and then positioned and adjusted by the sound engineer in a process known as "stringing up", all to create the "sound of reggae music you can literally feel as it comes off these big speakers".[24] Sound system crews hold 'sound clash' competitions, where each sound system is set up and then the two crews try to outdo each other,[25] both in terms of loudness and the "bass it produced".[26]

 
The 1987 Bose Acoustimass 5 stereo bass driver contained one six-inch (152 mm) driver per channel and provided crossover filtering for its two cube speaker arrays.[27]

In the 1980s, the Bose Acoustimass AM-5 became a popular subwoofer and small high-range satellite speaker system for home listening.[28] Steve Feinstein stated that with the AM-5, the system's "appearance mattered as much as, if not more than, great sound" to consumers of this era, as it was considered to be a "cool" look.[28] The success of the AM-5 led to other makers launching subwoofer-satellite speaker systems, including Boston Acoustics Sub Sat 6 and 7, and the Cambridge SoundWorks Ensemble systems (by Kloss).[28] Claims that these sub-satellite systems showed manufacturers and designers that home theater systems with a hidden subwoofer could be "feasible and workable in a normal living room" for mainstream consumers. Despite criticism of the AM-5 from audio experts, regarding a lack of bass range below 60 Hz, an "acoustic hole" in the 120 to 200 Hz range and a lack of upper range above 13 kHz for the satellites, the AM-5 system represented 30% of the US speaker market in the early 1990s.[28]

In the 1980s, Origin Acoustics developed the first residential in-wall subwoofer named Composer. It used an aluminum 10-inch (25.4 cm) driver and a foam-lined enclosure designed to be mounted directly into wall studs during the construction of a new home.[29] The frequency response for the Composer is 30 to 250 Hz.[30]

1990s to 2010s

While in the 1960s and 1970s deep bass speakers were once an exotic commodity owned by audiophiles, by the mid-1990s they were much more popular and widely used, with different sizes and capabilities of sound output.[31] An example of 1990s subwoofer use in sound reinforcement is the Ministry of Sound dance club which opened in 1991 in London. The dancefloor's sound system was based on Richard Long's design at Paradise Garage. The club spent about £500,000 on a sound system that used Martin Audio components in custom-built cabinets, including twelve 21" 9,500 watt active subwoofers, twelve 18-inch subwoofers and twelve Martin Audio W8C mid-high speakers.[32]

The popularity of the CD made it possible to add more low frequency content to recordings and satisfy a larger number of consumers.[16] Home subwoofers grew in popularity, as they were easy to add to existing multimedia speaker setups and they were easy to position or hide.[33] In 2018, some electronic dance music (EDM) sound systems for venues that play hardcore bass have multiple subwoofer arrays to deal with mid-bass (80–150 Hz), bass (40–80 Hz), and "infra-bass" (20–40 Hz).[34]

In 2015, Damon Krukowski wrote an article entitled "Drop the Bass: A Case Against Subwoofers" for Pitchfork magazine, based on his performing experience with Galaxie 500; he argues that "for certain styles of music", especially acoustic music genres, "these low-end behemoths are actually ruining our listening experience" by reducing the clarity of the low end.[35] In 2015, John Hunter from REL Acoustics stated that audiophiles tend to "have a love/hate relationship with subwoofers" because most subs have "awful", "entry-level" sound quality and they are used in an "inappropriate way", without integrating the bass seamlessly.[36]

Construction and features

Loudspeaker and enclosure design

 
Cross-section of a subwoofer drive unit.

Subwoofers use speaker drivers (woofers) typically between 8-inch (20 cm) and 21-inch (53 cm) in diameter. Some uncommon subwoofers use larger drivers, and single prototype subwoofers as large as 60-inch (152 cm) have been fabricated.[37] On the smaller end of the spectrum, subwoofer drivers as small as 4-inch (10 cm) may be used. Small subwoofer drivers in the 4-inch range are typically used in small computer speaker systems and compact home theatre subwoofer cabinets. The size of the driver and number of drivers in a cabinet depends on the design of the loudspeaker enclosure, the size of the cabinet, the desired sound pressure level, the lowest frequency targeted and the level of permitted distortion. The most common subwoofer driver sizes used for sound reinforcement in nightclubs, raves and pop/rock concerts are 10-, 12-, 15- and 18-inch models (25 cm, 30 cm, 38 cm, and 45 cm respectively). The largest available sound reinforcement subwoofers, 21-inch (53 cm) drivers, are less commonly seen.

The efficiency of a speaker driver is given by:

 

where the variables are Thiele/Small parameters. Deep low-frequency extension is a common goal for a subwoofer and small box volumes are also considered desirable, to save space and reduce the size for ease of transportation (in the case of sound reinforcement and DJ subwoofers). Hofmann's "Iron Law" therefore mandates low efficiency under those constraints, and indeed most subwoofers require considerable power, much more than other individual drivers.

So, for the example of a sealed speaker box, the box volume to achieve a given   is proportional to  :

 

where

 

Therefore, a decrease in box volume (i.e., a smaller speaker cabinet ) and the same   will decrease the efficiency of the subwoofer. Similarly the   of a speaker is proportional to  :

 

As the efficiency is proportional to  , small improvements in low-frequency extension with the same driver and box volume will result in very significant reductions in efficiency. For these reasons, subwoofers are typically very inefficient at converting electrical energy into sound energy. This combination of factors accounts for the higher amplifier power required to drive subwoofers, and the requirement for greater power handling for subwoofer drivers. Enclosure variations (e.g., bass reflex designs with a port in the cabinet) are often used for subwoofers to increase the efficiency of the driver/enclosure system, helping to reduce the amplifier power requirements.

 
Bass reflex enclosure schematic (cross-section).
 
Heavily braced and built subwoofer enclosure.

Subwoofers are typically constructed by mounting one or more woofers in a cabinet of medium-density fibreboard (MDF), oriented strand board (OSB), plywood, fiberglass, aluminum or other stiff materials. Because of the high air pressure they produce in the cabinet, subwoofer enclosures often require internal bracing to distribute the resulting forces.

Subwoofers have been designed using a number of enclosure approaches: bass reflex (with a port or vent), using a subwoofer and one or more passive radiator speakers in the enclosure, acoustic suspension (sealed enclosure), infinite baffle, horn-loaded, tapped horn, transmission line and bandpass. Each enclosure type has advantages and disadvantages in terms of efficiency increase, bass extension, cabinet size, distortion, and cost.

Multiple enclosure types may even be combined in a single design, such as in computer audio with the subwoofer design of the Labtec LCS-2424 (later acquired by Logitech and used for their Z340/Z540/Z640/Z3/Z4), which is a (primitive) passive radiator bandpass enclosure with a bass reflex dividing chamber.

While not necessarily an enclosure type, isobaric (such as push-pull) coupled loading of two drivers has sometimes been used in subwoofer products of computer,[38] home cinema[39] and sound reinforcement[40] class, and also DIY versions in automotive applications, to provide relatively deep bass for their size. Self-contained "isobaric-like" driver assemblies have been manufactured since the 2010s.[41][42][43]

The smallest subwoofers are typically those designed for desktop multimedia systems. The largest common subwoofer enclosures are those used for concert sound reinforcement systems or dance club sound systems. An example of a large concert subwoofer enclosure is the 1980s-era Electro-Voice MT-4 "Bass Cube" system, which used four 18-inch (45 cm) drivers. An example of a subwoofer that uses a bass horn is the Bassmaxx B-Two, which loads an 18-inch (45 cm) driver onto an 11-foot (3.4 m) long folded horn. Folded horn-type subwoofers can typically produce a deeper range with greater efficiency than the same driver in an enclosure that lacks a horn. However, folded horn cabinets are typically larger and heavier than front-firing enclosures, so folded horns are less commonly used. Some experimental fixed-installation subwoofer horns have been constructed using brick and concrete to produce a very long horn that allows a very deep sub-bass extension.[44]

Subwoofer output level can be increased by increasing cone surface area or by increasing cone excursion. Since large drivers require undesirably large cabinets, most subwoofer drivers have large excursions. Unfortunately, high excursion, at high power levels, tends to produce more distortion from inherent mechanical and magnetic effects in electro-dynamic drivers (the most common sort). The conflict between assorted goals can never be fully resolved; subwoofer designs necessarily involve tradeoffs and compromises. Hofmann's Iron Law (the efficiency of a woofer system is directly proportional to its cabinet volume (as in size) and to the cube of its cutoff frequency, that is how low in pitch it will go) applies to subwoofers just as it does to all loudspeakers.[45] Thus a subwoofer enclosure designer aiming at the deepest-pitched bass will probably have to consider using a large enclosure size; a subwoofer enclosure designer instructed to create the smallest possible cabinet (to make transportation easier) will need to compromise how low in pitch their cabinet will go.

Frequency range and frequency response

 
A large subwoofer cabinet used in a home hi-fi system. For home use, the bass driver with its 61 cm diameter (24 inch) is way out of the typical size range.

The frequency response specification of a speaker describes the range of frequencies or musical tones a speaker can reproduce, measured in hertz (Hz).[46] The typical frequency range for a subwoofer is between 20–200 Hz.[1] Professional concert sound system subwoofers typically operate below 100 Hz,[2] and THX-certified systems operate below 80 Hz.[3] Subwoofers vary in terms of the range of pitches that they can reproduce, depending on a number of factors such as the size of the cabinet and the construction and design of the enclosure and driver(s). Specifications of frequency response depend wholly for relevance on an accompanying amplitude value—measurements taken with a wider amplitude tolerance will give any loudspeaker a wider frequency response. For example, the JBL 4688 TCB Subwoofer System, a now-discontinued system which was designed for movie theaters, had a frequency response of 23–350 Hz when measured within a 10-decibel boundary (0 dB to −10 dB) and a narrower frequency response of 28–120 Hz when measured within a 6-decibel boundary (±3 dB).[47]

Subwoofers also vary in regard to the sound pressure levels achievable and the distortion levels that they produce over their range. Some subwoofers, such as "The Abyss" by MartinLogan for example, can reproduce pitches down to around 18 Hz (which is about the pitch of the lowest rumbling notes on a huge pipe organ with 32-foot (9.8 m) 16 Hz bass pipes) to 120 Hz (±3 dB). Nevertheless, even though the Abyss subwoofer can go down to 18 Hz, its lowest frequency and maximum SPL with a limit of 10% distortion is 35.5 Hz and 79.8 dB at 2 meters.[48] This means that a person choosing a subwoofer needs to consider more than just the lowest pitch that the subwoofer can reproduce.

Amplification

 
This picture of the internal components of an active (powered) subwoofer shows the circuitry for the power amplifier.

'Active subwoofers' include their own dedicated amplifiers within the cabinet. Some also include user-adjustable equalization that allows boosted or reduced output at particular frequencies; these vary from a simple "boost" switch, to fully parametric equalizers meant for detailed speaker and room correction. Some such systems are even supplied with a calibrated microphone to measure the subwoofer's in-room response, so the automatic equalizer can correct the combination of subwoofer, subwoofer location, and room response to minimize the effects of room modes and improve low-frequency performance.

 
This rear panel of a powered subwoofer shows the heat sinks used to cool the power amplifier.

'Passive subwoofers' have a subwoofer driver and enclosure, but they do not include an amplifier. They sometimes incorporate internal passive crossovers, with the filter frequency determined at the factory. These are generally used with third-party power amplifiers, taking their inputs from active crossovers earlier in the signal chain. Inexpensive Home Theatre in a Box packages often come with a passive subwoofer cabinet that is amplified by the multi-channel amplifier. While few high-end home-theater systems use passive subwoofers, this format is still popular in the professional sound industry.[49]

Equalization

 
This picture of the rear panel of a Polk subwoofer cabinet shows a low-pass filter adjustment knob.

Equalization can be used to adjust the in-room response of a subwoofer system.[50] Designers of active subwoofers sometimes include a degree of corrective equalization to compensate for known performance issues (e.g., a steeper than desired low end roll-off rate). In addition, many amplifiers include an adjustable low-pass filter, which prevents undesired higher frequencies from reaching the subwoofer driver. For example, if a listener's main speakers are usable down to 80 Hz, then the subwoofer filter can be set so the subwoofer only works below 80 Hz.[3] Typical filters involve some overlap in frequency ranges; a steep 4th-order 24 dB/octave low-pass filter is generally desired for subwoofers in order to minimize the overlap region. The filter section may also include a high-pass "infrasonic" or "subsonic" filter, which prevents the subwoofer driver from attempting to reproduce frequencies below its safe capabilities. Setting an infrasonic filter is important on bass reflex subwoofer cabinets, as the bass reflex design tends to create the risk of cone overexcursion at pitches below those of the port tuning, which can cause distortion and damage the subwoofer driver. For example, in a ported subwoofer enclosure tuned to 30 Hz, one may wish to filter out pitches below the tuning frequency; that is, frequencies below 30 Hz.

Some systems use parametric equalization in an attempt to correct for room frequency response irregularities.[51] Equalization is often unable to achieve flat frequency response at all listening locations, in part because of the resonance (i.e., standing wave) patterns at low frequencies in nearly all rooms. Careful positioning of the subwoofer within the room can also help flatten the frequency response.[52] Multiple subwoofers can manage a flatter general response since they can often be arranged to excite room modes more evenly than a single subwoofer, allowing equalization to be more effective.[53]

Phase control

 
The rear panel of a down-firing, active subwoofer cabinet.

Changing the relative phase of the subwoofer with respect to the woofers in other speakers may or may not help to minimize unwanted destructive acoustic interference in the frequency region covered by both the subwoofer and the main speakers. It may not help at all frequencies, and may create further problems with frequency response, but even so is generally provided as an adjustment for subwoofer amplifiers.[54] Phase control circuits may be a simple polarity reversal switch or a more complex continuously variable circuit.

Continuously variable phase control circuits are common in subwoofer amplifiers, and may be found in crossovers and as do-it-yourself electronics projects.[55][56][57][58][59] Phase controls allow the listener to change the arrival time of the subwoofer sound waves relative to the same frequencies from the main speakers (i.e., at and around the crossover point to the subwoofer). A similar effect can be achieved with the delay control on many home theater receivers. The subwoofer phase control found on many subwoofer amplifiers is actually a polarity inversion switch.[60] It allows users to reverse the polarity of the subwoofer relative to the audio signal it is being given. This type of control allows the subwoofer to either be in phase with the source signal, or 180 degrees out of phase.

The subwoofer phase can still be changed by moving the subwoofer closer to or further from the listening position, however this may not be always practical.

Servo subwoofers

Some active subwoofers use a servo feedback mechanism based on cone movement that modifies the signal sent to the voice coil. The servo feedback signal is derived from a comparison of the input signal to the amplifier versus the actual motion of the cone. The usual source of the feedback signal is a few turns of voice coil attached to the cone or a microchip-based accelerometer placed on the cone itself.[61][62] An advantage of a well-implemented servo subwoofer design is reduced distortion making smaller enclosure sizes possible.[63] The primary disadvantages are cost and complexity.[64]

Servo-controlled subwoofers are not the same as Tom Danley's ServoDrive subwoofers, whose primary mechanism of sound reproduction avoids the normal voice coil and magnet combination in favor of a high-speed belt-driven servomotor. The ServoDrive design increases output power, reduces harmonic distortion and virtually eliminates power compression, the loss of loudspeaker output that results from an increase in voice coil impedance due to overheating of the voice coil. This feature allows high-power operation for extended periods of time.[65][66][67] Intersonics was nominated for a TEC Award for its ServoDrive Loudspeaker (SDL) design in 1986 and for the Bass Tech 7 model in 1990.[68][69]

Applications

Home audio

 
Basic sealed subwoofer in a residential setting.

The use of a subwoofer augments the bass capability of the main speakers, and allows them to be smaller without sacrificing low-frequency capability. A subwoofer does not necessarily provide superior bass performance in comparison to large conventional loudspeakers on ordinary music recordings due to the typical lack of very low frequency content on such sources. However, there are recordings with substantial low-frequency content that most conventional loudspeakers are ill-equipped to handle without the help of a subwoofer, especially at high playback levels, such as music for pipe organs with 32' (9.75 meter) bass pipes (16 Hz), very large bass drums on symphony orchestra recordings and electronic music with extremely low synth bass parts, such as bass tests or bass songs.

Frequencies which are sufficiently low are not easily localized by humans, hence many stereo and multichannel audio systems feature only one subwoofer channel and a single subwoofer can be placed off-center without affecting the perceived sound stage, since the sound that it produces will be difficult to localize. The intention in a system with a subwoofer is often to use small main speakers (of which there are two for stereo and five or more for surround sound or movie tracks) and to hide the subwoofer elsewhere (e.g. behind furniture or under a table), or to augment an existing speaker to save it from having to handle woofer-destroying low frequencies at high levels. This effect is possible only if the subwoofer is restricted to quite low frequencies, usually taken to be, say, 100 Hz and below—still less localization is possible if restricted to even lower maximum frequencies. Higher upper limits for the subwoofer (e.g., 125 Hz) are much more easily localized, making a single subwoofer impractical. Home theatre systems typically use one subwoofer cabinet (the "1" in 5.1 surround sound). However, to "improve bass distribution in a room that has multiple seating locations, and prevent "node" or "null points" with weakened bass response, some home cinema enthusiasts use "5.2" or "7.2" surround sound systems with two subwoofer cabinets in the same room.[70]

Some users add a subwoofer because high levels of low-frequency bass are desired, even beyond what is in the original recording, as in the case of house music enthusiasts. Thus, subwoofers may be part of a package that includes satellite speakers, may be purchased separately, or may be built into the same cabinet as a conventional speaker system. For instance, some floor-standing tower speakers include a subwoofer driver in the lower portion of the same cabinet. Physical separation of subwoofer and "satellite" speakers not only allows placement in an inconspicuous location, but since sub-bass frequencies are particularly sensitive to room location (due to room resonances and reverberation 'modes'), the best position for the subwoofer is not likely to be where the "satellite" speakers are located.

Higher end home theater systems and enthusiasts may also opt to take low-frequency bass reproduction even further by incorporating 2 or more external subwoofers.[71] Having two subwoofers placed around the living room ensures even distribution of bass, reducing subwoofer localization and pressurizing the room with low frequency notes that can be felt, just like the cinemas.[72]

For greatest efficiency and best coupling to the room's air volume, subwoofers can be placed in a corner of the room, far from large room openings, and closer to the listener. This is possible since low bass frequencies have a long wavelength; hence there is little difference between the information reaching a listener's left and right ears, and so they cannot be readily localized. All low-frequency information is sent to the subwoofer. However, unless the sound tracks have been carefully mixed for a single subwoofer channel, it is possible to have some cancellation of low frequencies if bass information in one channel's speaker is out of phase with another.

The physically separate subwoofer/satellite arrangement, with small satellite speakers and a large subwoofer cabinet that can be hidden behind furniture, has been popularized by multimedia speaker systems such as Bose Acoustimass Home Entertainment Systems, Polk Audio RM2008 Series and Klipsch Audio Technologies ProMedia, among many others.[73][74]

Low-cost "home theater in a box" systems advertise their integration and simplicity.

 
A small subwoofer cabinet designed for use with a home computer.

Particularly among lower cost "Home Theater in a Box" systems and with "boom boxes", however, the inclusion of a subwoofer may be little more than a marketing technique. It is unlikely that a small woofer in an inexpensively-built compact plastic cabinet will have better bass performance than well-designed conventional (and typically larger) speakers in a plywood or MDF cabinet. Mere use of the term "subwoofer" is no guarantee of good or extended bass performance. Many multimedia "subwoofers" might better be termed "mid bass cabinets" (60 to 160 Hz), as they are too small to produce deep bass in the 30 to 59 Hz range.[75]

Further, poorly-designed systems often leave everything below about 120 Hz (or even higher) to the subwoofer, meaning that the subwoofer handles frequencies which the ear can use for sound source localization, thus introducing an undesirable subwoofer "localization effect". This is usually due to poor crossover designs or choices (too high a crossover point or insufficient crossover slope) used in many computer and home theater systems; localization also comes from port noise[76] and from typically large amounts of harmonic distortion in the subwoofer design.[77] Home subwoofers sold individually usually include crossover circuitry to assist with the integration of the subwoofer into an existing system.

Car audio

 
Multiple subwoofers in a hatchback car.

Automobiles are not well suited for the "hidden" subwoofer approach due to space limitations in the passenger compartments. It is not possible, in most circumstances, to fit such large drivers and enclosures into doors or dashboards, so subwoofers are installed in the trunk or back seat space. Some car audio enthusiasts compete to produce very high sound pressure levels in the confines of their vehicle's cabin; sometimes dangerously high sound pressure levels. The "SPL wars" have drawn much attention to subwoofers in general, but subjective competitions in sound quality ("SQ") have not gained equivalent popularity. Top SPL cars are not able to play normal music, or perhaps even to drive normally as they are designed solely for competition. Many non-competition subwoofers are also capable of generating high levels in cars due to the small volume of a typical car interior. High sound levels can cause hearing loss and tinnitus if one is exposed to them for an extended period of time.[78]

In the 2000s, several car audio manufacturers produced subwoofers using non-circular shapes, including Boston Acoustic, Kicker, Sony, Bazooka, and X-Tant. Other major car audio manufacturers like Rockford Fosgate did not follow suit since non-circular subwoofer shapes typically carry some sort of distortion penalties.[79][80][81] In situations of limited mounting space they provide a greater cone area and assuming all other variables are constant, greater maximum output. An important factor in the "square sub vs round sub" argument is the effects of the enclosure used. In a sealed enclosure, the maximum displacement is determined by

 

where

  • Vd is the volume of displacement (in m3)
  • xmax is the amount of linear excursion the speaker is mechanically capable of (in m)
  • Sd is the cone area of the subwoofer (in m2).

These are some of the Thiele/Small parameters which can either be measured or found with the driver specifications.

Cinema sound

After the introduction of Sensurround, movie theater owners began installing permanent subwoofer systems. Dolby Stereo 70 mm Six Track was a six-channel film sound format introduced in 1976 that used two subwoofer channels for stereo reproduction of low frequencies. In 1981, Altec introduced a dedicated cinema subwoofer model tuned to around 20 Hz: the 8182. Starting in 1983, THX certification of the cinema sound experience quantified the parameters of good audio for watching films, including requirements for subwoofer performance levels and enough isolation from outside sounds so that noise did not interfere with the listening experience.[82] This helped provide guidelines for multiplex cinema owners who wanted to isolate each individual cinema from its neighbors, even as louder subwoofers were making isolation more difficult. Specific cinema subwoofer models appeared from JBL, Electro-Voice, Eastern Acoustic Works, Kintek, Meyer Sound Laboratories and BGW Systems in the early 1990s. In 1992, Dolby Digital's six-channel film sound format incorporated a single LFE channel, the "point one" in 5.1 surround sound systems.

Tom Horral, a Boston-based acoustician, blames complaints about modern movies being too loud on subwoofers. He says that before subwoofers made it possible to have loud, relatively undistorted bass, movie sound levels were limited by the distortion in less capable systems at low frequency and high levels.[83]

Sound reinforcement

 
Each stack of speakers in this sound reinforcement setup consists of two EAW SB1000 slanted baffle subwoofers (each contains two 18-inch drivers) and two EAW KF850 full range cabinets for the mid and high frequencies.

Professional audio subwoofers used in rock concerts in stadia, DJ performances at dance music venues (e.g., electronic dance music) and similar events must be capable of very high bass output levels, at very low frequencies, with low distortion. This is reflected in the design attention given in the 2010s to the subwoofer applications for sound reinforcement, public address systems, dance club systems and concert systems. Cerwin-Vega states that when a subwoofer cabinet is added to an existing full-range speaker system, this is advantageous, as it moves the "...lowest frequencies from your main [full-range] PA speakers" thus "...eliminat[ing] a large amount of the excess work that your main top [full-range] box was trying to reproduce. As a result, your main [full-range] cabinets will run more efficiently and at higher volumes."[84] A different argument for adding subwoofer cabinets is that they may increase the "level of clarity" and "perceived loudness" of an overall PA system, even if the SPL is not actually increased.[85] Sound on Sound states that adding a subwoofer enclosure to a full-range system will reduce "cone excursion", thus lowering distortion, leading to an overall cleaner sound.[86]

Consumer applications (as in home use) are considerably less demanding due to much smaller listening space and lower playback levels. Subwoofers are now almost universal in professional sound applications such as live concert sound, churches, nightclubs, and theme parks. Movie theatres certified to the THX standard for playback always include high-capability subwoofers. Some professional applications require subwoofers designed for very high sound levels, using multiple 12-, 15-, 18- or 21-inch drivers (30 cm, 40 cm, 45 cm, 53 cm respectively). Drivers as small as 10-inch (25 cm) are occasionally used, generally in horn-loaded enclosures.

The number of subwoofer enclosures used in a concert depends on a number of factors, including the size of the venue, whether it is indoors or outdoors, the amount of low-frequency content in the band's sound, the desired volume of the concert, and the design and construction of the enclosures (e.g., direct-radiating versus horn-loaded). A tiny coffeehouse may only need a single 10-inch subwoofer cabinet to augment the bass provided by the full-range speakers. A small bar may use one or two direct-radiating 15-inch (40 cm) subwoofer cabinets. A large dance club may have a row of four or five twin 18-inch (45 cm) subwoofer cabinets, or more. In the largest stadium venues, there may be a very large number of subwoofer enclosures. For example, the 2009–2010 U2 360° Tour used 24 Clair Brothers BT-218 subwoofers (a double 18-inch (45 cm) box) around the perimeter of the central circular stage, and 72 proprietary Clair Brothers cardioid S4 subwoofers placed underneath the ring-shaped "B" stage which encircles the central main stage.[87][88]

 
A row of subwoofer cabinets in front of the stage of a rock concert. One enclosure out of every stack of three is turned backward to make a cardioid output pattern.

The main speakers may be 'flown' from the ceiling of a venue on chain hoists, and 'flying points' (i.e., attachment points) are built into many professional loudspeaker enclosures. Subwoofers can be flown or stacked on the ground near the stage. One of the reasons subwoofers may be installed on the ground is that on-the-ground installation can increase the bass performance, particularly if the subwoofer is placed in the corner of a room (conversely, if a subwoofer cabinet is perceived as too loud, alternatives to on-the-ground or in-corner installation may be considered). There can be more than 50 double-18-inch (45 cm) cabinets in a typical rock concert system. Just as consumer subwoofer enclosures can be made of medium-density fibreboard (MDF), oriented strand board (OSB), plywood, plastic or other dense material, professional subwoofer enclosures can be built from the same materials.[89][90] MDF is commonly used to construct subwoofers for permanent installations as its density is relatively high and weatherproofing is not a concern. Other permanent installation subwoofers have used very thick plywood: the Altec 8182 (1981) used 7-ply 28 mm birch-faced oak plywood.[91] Touring subwoofers are typically built from 18–20 mm thick void-free Baltic birch (Betula pendula or Betula pubescens) plywood from Finland, Estonia or Russia; such plywood affords greater strength for frequently transported enclosures.[92] Not naturally weatherproof, Baltic birch is coated with carpet, thick paint or spray-on truck bedliner to give the subwoofer enclosures greater durability.[93][94]

 
Large subwoofer enclosures.

Touring subwoofer cabinets are typically designed with features that facilitate moving the enclosure (e.g., wheels, a "towel bar" handle and recessed handles), a protective grille for the speaker (in direct radiating-style cabinets), metal or plastic protection for the cabinets to protect the finish as the cabinets are being slid one on top of another, and hardware to facilitate stacking the cabinets (e.g., interlocking corners) and for "flying" the cabinets from stage rigging. In the 2000s, many small- to mid-size subwoofers designed for bands' live sound use and DJ applications are "powered subs"; that is, they have an integrated power amplifier. These models typically have a built-in crossover. Some models have a metal-reinforced hole in which a speaker pole can be mounted for elevating full-frequency range cabinets.

Use in a full-range system

In professional concert sound system design, subwoofers can be incorporated seamlessly with the main speakers into a stereo or mono full-range system by using an active crossover. The audio engineer typically adjusts the frequency point at which lower frequency sounds are routed to the subwoofer speaker(s), and mid-frequency and higher frequency sounds are sent to the full-range speakers. Such a system receives its signal from the main mono or stereo mixing console mix bus and amplifies all frequencies together in the desired balance. If the main sound system is stereo, the subwoofers can also be in stereo. Otherwise, a mono subwoofer channel can be derived within the crossover from a stereo mix, depending on the crossover make and model. While 2010-era subwoofer cabinet manufacturers suggest placing subwoofers on either side of a stage (as implied by the inclusion of pole cups for the full-range PA cabinets), Dave Purton argues that for club gigs, having two subwoofer cabinets on either side of a stage will lead to gaps in bass coverage in the venue; he states that putting the two subwoofer cabinets together will create a more even, omnidirectional sub-bass tone.[86]

PA systems by size and subwoofer approach

PA system set-up Venue size
Small system: Two pole-mounted mid/high frequency PA speaker cabinets and two small subwoofer cabinets with 15- or 18-inch subwoofers (Note: this would be used in club where jazz, acoustic music, country music or soft rock is played) Small club with capacity for up to 300 people
Small high amplifier power system: 2 high amplifier power-rated mid/high frequency PA speakers with 15-inch woofers and a large horn-loaded tweeter; two high amplifier power-rated subwoofer cabinets with one or two 18-inch subwoofer cabs (front-firing, also known as "front loaded", or manifold-loaded subwoofer cabinets) Small club with capacity for up to 500 people
Mid-size PA system: 4 larger multiwoofer mid/high frequency PA speaker cabs (e.g., each with two 15-inch woofers) and four subwoofer cabinets, either front-firing, manifold loaded or a folded horn Large clubs with capacity for 500+ people, small music festivals, fairs
Large-size PA system: Multiple mid/high frequency PA speakers, possibly "flown" up high in rigging, and a number of subwoofer cabinets (either front firing, manifold loaded or folded horn) Large venues with capacity for 1000+ people, larger music festivals

[84]

Aux-fed subwoofers

Instead of being incorporated into a full-range system, concert subwoofers can be supplied with their own signal from a separate mix bus on the mixing console; often one of the auxiliary sends ("aux" or "auxes") is used. This configuration is called "aux-fed subwoofers", and has been observed to significantly reduce low-frequency "muddiness" that can build up in a concert sound system which has on stage a number of microphones each picking up low frequencies and each having different phase relationships of those low frequencies.[2] The aux-fed subwoofers method greatly reduces the number of sources feeding the subwoofers to include only those instruments that have desired low-frequency information; sources such as kick drum, bass guitar, samplers and keyboard instruments. This simplifies the signal sent to the subwoofers and makes for greater clarity and low punch.[95] Aux-fed subwoofers can even be stereo, if desired, using two auxiliary mix buses.

Directional bass

 
Cardioid dispersion pattern of two end-fire subwoofers placed one in front of the other. The signal feeding the enclosure nearest the listener is delayed by a few milliseconds.[96]

To keep low-frequency sound focused on the audience area and not on the stage, and to keep low frequencies from bothering people outside of the event space, a variety of techniques have been developed in concert sound to turn the naturally omnidirectional radiation of subwoofers into a more directional pattern. Several examples of sound reinforcement system applications where sound engineers seek to provide more directional bass sound are: music festivals, which often have several bands performing at the same time on different stages; large raves or EDM events, where there are multiple DJs performing at the same time in different rooms or stages; and multiplex movie theatres, in which there are many films being shown simultaneously in auditoriums that share common walls. These techniques include: setting up subwoofers in a vertical array; using combinations of delay and polarity inversion; and setting up a delay-shaded system. With a cardioid dispersion pattern, two end-fire subwoofers can be placed one in front of the other. The enclosure nearest the listener is delayed by a few milliseconds. The second subwoofer is delayed a precise amount corresponding to the time it takes sound to traverse the distance between speaker grilles.

Vertical array

Stacking or rigging the subwoofers in a vertical array focuses the low frequencies forward to a greater or lesser extent depending on the physical length of the array. Longer arrays have a more directional effect at lower frequencies. The directionality is more pronounced in the vertical dimension, yielding a radiation pattern that is wide but not tall. This helps reduce the amount of low-frequency sound bouncing off the ceiling indoors and assists in mitigating external noise complaints outdoors.

Rear delay array
 
CSA: Six subwoofers arranged for less bass energy on stage. Signal going to the reversed enclosures is delayed a few milliseconds.

Another cardioid subwoofer array pattern can be used horizontally, one which takes few channels of processing and no change in required physical space. This method is often called "cardioid subwoofer array" or "CSA"[97] even though the pattern of all directional subwoofer methods is cardioid. The CSA method reverses the enclosure orientation and inverts the polarity of one out of every three subwoofers across the front of the stage, and delays those enclosures for maximum cancellation of the target frequency on stage. Polarity inversion can be implemented electronically, by reversing the wiring polarity, or by physically positioning the enclosure to face rearward. This method reduces forward output relative to a tight-packed, flat-fronted array of subwoofers, but can solve problems of unwanted low-frequency energy coming into microphones on stage. Compared to the end-fire array, this method has less on-axis energy but more even pattern control throughout the audience, and more predictable cancellation rearward. The effect spans a range of slightly more than one octave.[97]

A second method of rear delay array combines end-fire topology with polarity reversal, using two subwoofers positioned front to back, the drivers spaced one-quarter wavelength apart, the rear enclosure inverted in polarity and delayed by a few milliseconds for maximum cancellation on stage of the target frequency.[98] This method has the least output power directed toward the audience, compared to other directional methods.

End-fire array
 
End-fire array using three rows of subwoofers. Each row is delayed a few milliseconds more than the previous row.

The end-fire subwoofer method, also called "forward steered arrays",[99] places subwoofer drivers co-axially in one or more rows, using destructive interference to reduce emissions to the sides and rear. This can be done with separate subwoofer enclosures positioned front to back with a spacing between them of one-quarter wavelength of the target frequency, the frequency that is least wanted on stage or most desired in the audience. Each row is delayed beyond the first row by an amount related to the speed of sound in air; the delay is typically a few milliseconds. The arrival time of sound energy from all the subwoofers is near-simultaneous from the audience's perspective, but is canceled out to a large degree behind the subwoofers because of offset sound wave arrival times. Directionality of the target frequency can achieve as much as 25 dB rear attenuation, and the forward sound is coherently summed in line with the subwoofers.[100] The positional technique of end-fire subwoofers came into widespread use in European live concert sound in 2006.[101]

The end-fire array trades a few decibels of output power for directionality, so it requires more enclosures for the same output power as a tight-packed, flat-fronted array of enclosures. Sixteen enclosures in four rows were used in 2007 at one of the stages of the Ultra Music Festival, to reduce low-frequency interference to neighboring stages.[102] Because of the physical size of the end-fire array, few concert venues are able to implement it. The output pattern suffers from comb-filtering off-axis, but can be further shaped by adjusting the frequency response of each row of subwoofers.[99]

Delay-shaded array

A long line of subwoofers placed horizontally along the front edge of the stage can be delayed such that the center subwoofers fire several milliseconds prior to the ones flanking them, which fire several milliseconds prior to their neighbors, continuing in this fashion until the last subwoofers are reached at the outside ends of the subwoofer row (beamforming). This method helps to counteract the extreme narrowing of the horizontal dispersion pattern seen with a horizontal subwoofer array. Such delay shading can be used to virtually reshape a loudspeaker array.[103]

Directional enclosure

Some subwoofer enclosure designs rely on drivers facing to the sides or to the rear in order to achieve a degree of directionality.[104][105] End-fire drivers can be positioned within a single enclosure that houses more than one driver.[106]

Variants

Some less commonly-used bass enclosures are variants of the subwoofer enclosure's normal range, such as the mid-bass cabinet (60–160 Hz) and the infrasonic (extra low) subwoofer (below 30 Hz).

Enclosure designs

 
Compound or 4th order band-pass enclosure

Front-loaded subwoofers have one or more subwoofer speakers in a cabinet, typically with a grille to protect the speakers. In practice, many front-loaded subwoofer cabinets have a vent or port in the speaker cabinet, thus creating a bass reflex enclosure. Even though a bass reflex port or vent creates some additional phase delay, it adds SPL, which is often a key factor in PA and sound reinforcement system applications. As such, non-vented front-firing subwoofer cabinets are rare in pro audio applications.

Horn-loaded subwoofers have a subwoofer speaker that has a pathway following the loudspeaker. To save space, the pathway is often folded, so that the folded pathway will fit into a box-style cabinet. Cerwin-Vega states that its folded horn subwoofer cabinets, "...on average, produce 6 dB more output at 1 watt than a dual 18[-inch] vented box" giving "four times the output with half the number of drivers".[84] The Cerwin-Vega JE-36C has a five feet long folded horn chamber length in the wooden cabinet.[84]

Manifold subwoofers have two or more subwoofer speakers that feed the throat of a single horn. This increases SPL for the subwoofer, at the cost of increased distortion. EV has a manifold speaker cabinet in which four drivers are mounted as close together as practical. This is a different design than the "multiple drivers in one throat" approach. An unusual example of manifold subwoofer design is the Thomas Mundorf (TM) approach of having four subwoofers facing each other and sitting close together, which is used for theatre in the round shows, where the audience surrounds the performers in a big circle (e.g., Metallica has used this in some concerts). The TM approach produces an omnidirectional bass sound.[107] Cerwin-Vega defines a manifold enclosure as one in which "...the driver faces into a tuned ported cavity. You hear sound directly from the back of the driver in addition to the sound that emanates out of the port. This type of enclosure design extends the frequency capability of the driver lower than it would reproduce by itself."[84]

Bandpass subwoofers have a sealed cabinet within another cabinet, with the "outer" cabinet typically having a vent or port.

Bass instrument amplification

In rare cases, sound reinforcement subwoofer enclosures are also used for bass instrument amplification by electric bass players and synth bass players. For most bands and most small- to mid-size venues (e.g., nightclubs and bars), standard bass guitar speaker enclosures or keyboard amplifiers will provide sufficient sound pressure levels for onstage monitoring. Since a regular electric bass has a low "E" (41 Hz) as its lowest note, most standard bass guitar cabinets are only designed with a range that goes down to about 40 Hz. However, in some cases, performers wish to have extended sub-bass response that is not available from standard instrument speaker enclosures, so they use subwoofer cabinets. Just as some electric guitarists add huge stacks of guitar cabinets mainly for show, some bassists will add immense subwoofer cabinets with 18-inch woofers mainly for show, and the extension subwoofer cabinets will be operated at a lower volume than the main bass cabinets.

Bass guitar players who may use subwoofer cabinets include performers who play with extended range basses that include a low "B" string (about 31 Hz), bassists who play in styles where a very powerful sub-bass response is an important part of the sound (e.g., funk, Latin, gospel, R & B, etc.), and/or bass players who perform in stadium-size venues or large outdoor venues. Keyboard players who use subwoofers for on-stage monitoring include electric organ players who use bass pedal keyboards (which go down to a low "C" which is about 33 Hz) and synth bass players who play rumbling sub-bass parts that go as low as 18 Hz. Of all of the keyboard instruments that are amplified onstage, synthesizers can produce some of the lowest pitches, because unlike a traditional electric piano or electric organ, which have as their lowest notes a low "A" and a low "C", respectively, a synth does not have a fixed lowest octave. A synth player can add lower octaves to a patch by pressing an "octave down" button, which can produce pitches that are at the limits of human hearing.

Several concert sound subwoofer manufacturers suggest that their subs can be used for bass instrument amplification. Meyer Sound suggests that its 650-R2 Concert Series Subwoofer, a 14-square-foot (1.3 m2) enclosure with two 18-inch drivers (45 cm), can be used for bass instrument amplification.[108] While performers who use concert sound subwoofers for onstage monitoring may like the powerful sub-bass sound that they get onstage, sound engineers may find the use of large subwoofers (e.g., two 18-inch drivers (45 cm)) for onstage instrument monitoring to be problematic, because it may interfere with the "Front of House" sub-bass sound.

Bass shakers

Since infrasonic bass is felt, sub-bass can be augmented using tactile transducers. Unlike a typical subwoofer driver, which produces audible vibrations, tactile transducers produce low-frequency vibrations that are designed to be felt by individuals who are touching the transducer or indirectly through a piece of furniture or a wooden floor. Tactile transducers have recently emerged as a device class, called variously "bass shakers", "butt shakers" and "throne shakers". They are attached to a seat, for instance a drummer's stool ("throne") or gamer's chair, car seat or home theater seating, and the vibrations of the driver are transmitted to the body then to the ear in a manner similar to bone conduction.[109][110] They connect to an amplifier like a normal subwoofer. They can be attached to a large flat surface (for instance a floor or platform) to create a large low- frequency conduction area, although the transmission of low frequencies through the feet is not as efficient as through the seat.[111]

The advantage of tactile transducers used for low frequencies is that they allow a listening environment that is not filled with loud low-frequency sound waves in the air. This helps the drummer in a rock music band to monitor their kick drum performance without filling the stage with powerful, loud low-frequency sound from a 15-inch (40 cm) subwoofer monitor and an amplifier, which can "leak" into other drum mics and lower the quality of the sound mix. By not having a large, powerful subwoofer monitor, a bass shaker also enables a drummer to lower the sound pressure levels that they are exposed to during a performance, reducing the risk of hearing damage. For home cinema or video game use, bass shakers help the user avoid disturbing others in nearby apartments or rooms, because even powerful sound effects such as explosion sounds in a war video game or the simulated rumbling of an earthquake in an adventure film will not be heard by others. However, some critics argue that the felt vibrations are disconnected from the auditory experience, and they claim that that music is less satisfying with the "butt shaker" than sound effects. As well, critics have claimed that the bass shaker itself can rattle during loud sound effects, which can distract the listener.[112]

World record claims

With varying measures upon which to base claims, several subwoofers have been said to be the world's largest, loudest or lowest.

Matterhorn

The Matterhorn is a subwoofer model completed in March 2007 by Danley Sound Labs in Gainesville, Georgia after a U.S. military request for a loudspeaker that could project infrasonic waves over a distance. The Matterhorn was designed to reproduce a continuous sine wave from 15 to 20 Hz, and generate 94 dB at a distance of 250 meters (820 ft), and more than 140 dB for music playback measured at the horn mouth.[113] It can generate a constant 15 Hz sine wave tone at 140 dB for 24 hours a day, seven days a week with extremely low harmonic distortion. The subwoofer has a flat frequency response from 15 to 80 Hz, and is down 3 dB at 12 Hz.[114] It was built within an intermodal container 20 feet (6.1 m) long and 8 by 8 feet (2.4 m × 2.4 m) square.[115] The container doors swing open to reveal a tapped horn driven by 40 long-throw 15-inch (40 cm) MTX speaker drivers each powered by its own 1000-watt amplifier.[116][117] The manufacturer claims that 53 13-ply 18 mm 4-by-8-foot (1.2 m × 2.4 m) sheets of plywood were used in its construction,[116] though one of the fabricators wrote that double-thickness 26-ply sheets were used for convenience.[118]

A diesel generator is housed within the enclosure to supply electricity when external power is unavailable.[115] Of the constant tone output capability, designer Tom Danley wrote that the "target 94 dB at 250 meters is not the essentially fictional 'burst' or 'peak SPL' nonsense in pro sound, or like the 'death burp' signal used in car sound contests."[119] At the annual National Systems Contractors Association (NSCA) convention in March 2007, the Matterhorn was barred from making any loud demonstrations of its power because of concerns about damaging the building of the Orange County Convention Center.[113] Instead, using only a single 20 amp electrical circuit for safety, visitors were allowed to step inside the horn of the subwoofer for an "acoustic massage" as the fractionally powered Matterhorn reproduced low level 10–15 Hz waves.

Royal Device custom installation

Another subwoofer claimed to be the world's biggest is a custom installation in Italy made by Royal Device primarily of bricks, concrete and sound-deadening material[44] consisting of two subwoofers embedded in the foundation of a listening room.[120] The horn-loaded subwoofers each have a floor mouth that is 2.2 square meters (24 sq ft), and a horn length that is 9.5 meters (31 ft), in a cavity 1 meter (3 ft 3 in) under the floor of the listening room. Each subwoofer is driven by eight 18-inch subwoofer drivers with 100 millimeters (3.9 in) voice coils. The designers assert that the floor mouths of the horns are additionally loaded acoustically by a vertical wooden horn expansion and the room's ceiling to create a 10 Hz "full power" wave at the listening position.

Concept Design 60-inch

A single 60-inch (1,500 mm) diameter subwoofer driver was designed by Richard Clark and David Navone with the help of Dr. Eugene Patronis of the Georgia Institute of Technology. The driver was intended to break sound pressure level records when mounted in a road vehicle, calculated to be able to achieve more than 180 dBSPL. It was built in 1997, driven by DC motors connected to a rotary crankshaft somewhat like in a piston engine. The cone diameter was 54 inches (1,400 mm) and was held in place with a 3-inch (76 mm) surround. With a 6-inch (150 mm) peak-to-peak stroke, it created a one-way air displacement of 6,871 cubic inches (112,600 cm3).[121] It was capable of generating 5–20 Hz sine waves at various DC motor speeds—not as a response to audio signal—it could not play music. The driver was mounted in a stepvan owned by Tim Maynor but was too powerful for the amount of applied reinforcement and damaged the vehicle.[121] MTX's Loyd Ivey helped underwrite the project and the driver was then called the MTX "Thunder 1000000" (one million).[122]

Still unfinished, the vehicle was entered in an SPL competition in 1997 at which a complaint was lodged against the computer control of the DC motor. Instead of using the controller, two leads were touched together in the hope that the motor speed was set correctly. The drive shaft broke after one positive stroke which created an interior pressure wave of 162 dB. The Concept Design 60-inch was not shown in public after 1998.[123]

MTX Jackhammer

The heaviest production subwoofer intended for use in automobiles is the MTX Jackhammer by MTX Audio, which features a 22-inch (560 mm) diameter cone. The Jackhammer has been known to take upwards of 6000 watts sent to a dual voice coil moving within a 900-ounce (26 kg) strontium ferrite magnet. The Jackhammer weighs in at 369 pounds (167 kg) and has an aluminum heat sink.[124] The Jackhammer has been featured on the reality TV show Pimp My Ride.[125]

See also

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subwoofer, subwoofer, loudspeaker, designed, reproduce, pitched, audio, frequencies, known, bass, bass, lower, frequency, than, those, which, optimally, generated, woofer, typical, frequency, range, subwoofer, about, consumer, products, below, professional, li. A subwoofer or sub is a loudspeaker designed to reproduce low pitched audio frequencies known as bass and sub bass lower in frequency than those which can be optimally generated by a woofer The typical frequency range for a subwoofer is about 20 200 Hz for consumer products 1 below 100 Hz for professional live sound 2 and below 80 Hz in THX certified systems 3 Subwoofers are never used alone as they are intended to augment the low frequency range of loudspeakers that cover the higher frequency bands While the term subwoofer technically only refers to the speaker driver in common parlance the term often refers to a subwoofer driver mounted in a speaker enclosure cabinet often with a built in amplifier 12 inch 30 cm subwoofer driver loudspeaker A driver is commonly installed in an enclosure often a wooden cabinet to prevent the sound waves coming off the back of the driver diaphragm from canceling out the sound waves being generated from the front of the subwoofer A typical Hi Fi subwoofer r with the subwoofer loudspeaker built into a cabinet On the left a version with transparent cabinet is shown where the large magnet grayish colour of the speaker driver can be seen in the middle close to the brown damper Subwoofers are made up of one or more woofers mounted in a loudspeaker enclosure often made of wood capable of withstanding air pressure while resisting deformation Subwoofer enclosures come in a variety of designs including bass reflex with a port or vent using a subwoofer and one or more passive radiator speakers in the enclosure acoustic suspension sealed enclosure infinite baffle horn loaded tapped horn transmission line bandpass or isobaric designs Each design has unique trade offs with respect to efficiency low frequency range cabinet size and cost Passive subwoofers have a subwoofer driver and enclosure and they are powered by an external amplifier Active subwoofers include a built in amplifier 4 The first home audio subwoofers were developed in the 1960s to add bass response to home stereo systems Subwoofers came into greater popular consciousness in the 1970s with the introduction of Sensurround in movies such as Earthquake which produced loud low frequency sounds through large subwoofers With the advent of the compact cassette and the compact disc in the 1980s the reproduction of deep and loud bass was no longer limited by the ability of a phonograph record stylus to track a groove 5 and producers could add more low frequency content to recordings As well during the 1990s DVDs were increasingly recorded with surround sound processes that included a low frequency effects LFE channel which could be heard using the subwoofer in home theater systems During the 1990s subwoofers also became increasingly popular in home stereo systems custom car audio installations and in PA systems By the 2000s subwoofers became almost universal in sound reinforcement systems in nightclubs and concert venues Contents 1 History 1 1 1920s to 1950s precursors 1 2 1960s first subwoofers 1 3 1970s to 1980s 1 4 1990s to 2010s 2 Construction and features 2 1 Loudspeaker and enclosure design 2 2 Frequency range and frequency response 2 3 Amplification 2 4 Equalization 2 5 Phase control 2 6 Servo subwoofers 3 Applications 3 1 Home audio 3 2 Car audio 3 3 Cinema sound 3 4 Sound reinforcement 3 4 1 Use in a full range system 3 4 2 Aux fed subwoofers 3 4 3 Directional bass 3 4 3 1 Vertical array 3 4 3 2 Rear delay array 3 4 3 3 End fire array 3 4 3 4 Delay shaded array 3 4 3 5 Directional enclosure 3 5 Variants 3 6 Enclosure designs 3 7 Bass instrument amplification 4 Bass shakers 5 World record claims 5 1 Matterhorn 5 2 Royal Device custom installation 5 3 Concept Design 60 inch 5 4 MTX Jackhammer 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory Edit View of the underside of the downward firing Infinity Servo Statik 1 showing the size of the 18 inch 45 cm custom wound Cerwin Vega driver in relation to a can of Diet Coke to show scale 1920s to 1950s precursors Edit From about 1900 to the 1950s the lowest frequency in practical use in recordings broadcasting and music playback was 100 Hz 6 When sound was developed for motion pictures the basic RCA sound system was a single 8 inch 20 3 cm speaker mounted in straight horn an approach which was deemed unsatisfactory by Hollywood decisionmakers who hired Western Electric engineers to develop a better speaker system 7 The early Western Electric experiments added a set of 18 inch drivers for the low end in a large open backed baffle extending the range down to 50 Hz and a high frequency unit but MGM was not pleased with the sound of the three way system as they had concerns about the delay between the different drivers 7 In 1933 the head of MGM s sound department Douglas Shearer worked with John Hilliard and James B Lansing who would later found Altec Lansing in 1941 and JBL in 1946 to develop a new speaker system that used a two way enclosure with a W shaped bass horn that could go as low as 40 Hz 7 The Shearing Lansing 500 A ended up being used in screening rooms dubbing theaters and early sound reinforcement 7 In the late 1930s Lansing created a smaller two way speaker with a 15 inch 38 cm woofer in a vented enclosure which he called the Iconic system it was used as a studio monitor and in high end home hi fi set ups 7 During the 1940s swing era to get deeper bass pipelike opening s were cut into speaker enclosures creating bass reflex enclosures as it was found that even a fairly inexpensive speaker enclosure once modified in this way could transmit the driving power of a heavy drumbeat and sometimes not much else to a crowded dancefloor 6 Prior to the development of the first subwoofers woofers were used to reproduce bass frequencies usually with a crossover point set at 500 Hz and a 4 inch 10 cm loudspeaker in an infinite baffle or in professional sound applications a hybrid horn loaded bass reflex enclosure such as the 15 inch Altec Lansing A 7 enclosure nicknamed the Voice of the Theater which was introduced in 1946 8 In the mid 1950s the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences selected the big boxy Altec A 7 as the industry standard for movie sound reproduction in theaters 9 1960s first subwoofers Edit In September 1964 Raymon Dones of El Cerrito California received the first patent for a subwoofer specifically designed to augment omnidirectionally the low frequency range of modern stereo systems US patent 3150739 It was able to reproduce distortion free low frequencies down to 15 cycles per second 15 Hz A specific objective of Dones s invention was to provide portable sound enclosures capable of high fidelity reproduction of low frequency sound waves without giving an audible indication of the direction from which they emanated Dones s loudspeaker was marketed in the US under the trade name The Octavium 10 from the early 1960s to the mid 1970s The Octavium was utilized by several recording artists of that era most notably the Grateful Dead bassist Monk Montgomery bassist Nathan East and the Pointer Sisters The Octavium speaker and Dones s subwoofer technology were also utilized in a few select theaters to reproduce low pitch frequencies for the 1974 blockbuster movie Earthquake During the late 1960s Dones s Octavium was favorably reviewed by audiophile publications including Hi Fi News and Audio Magazine Another early subwoofer enclosure made for home and studio use was the separate bass speaker for the Servo Statik 1 by New Technology Enterprises 11 Designed as a prototype in 1966 by physicist Arnold Nudell and airline pilot Cary Christie in Nudell s garage it used a second winding around a custom Cerwin Vega 18 inch 45 cm driver to provide servo control information to the amplifier and it was offered for sale at 1795 some 40 more expensive than any other complete loudspeaker listed at Stereo Review 11 In 1968 the two found outside investors and reorganized as Infinity 11 The subwoofer was reviewed positively in Stereophile magazine s winter 1968 issue as the SS 1 by Infinity The SS 1 received very good reviews in 1970 from High Fidelity magazine 11 A display of Cerwin Vega speaker enclosures at the 1975 Audio Engineering Society meeting Another of the early subwoofers was developed during the late 1960s by Ken Kreisel the former president of the Miller amp Kreisel Sound Corporation in Los Angeles When Kreisel s business partner Jonas Miller who owned a high end audio store in Los Angeles told Kreisel that some purchasers of the store s high end electrostatic speakers had complained about a lack of bass response in the electrostatics Kreisel designed a powered woofer that would reproduce only those frequencies that were too low for the electrostatic speakers to convey 12 Infinity s full range electrostatic speaker system that was developed during the 1960s also used a woofer to cover the lower frequency range that its electrostatic arrays did not handle adequately 1970s to 1980s Edit The first use of a subwoofer in a recording session was in 1973 for mixing the Steely Dan album Pretzel Logic when recording engineer Roger Nichols arranged for Kreisel to bring a prototype of his subwoofer to Village Recorders 13 Further design modifications were made by Kreisel over the next ten years and in the 1970s and 1980s by engineer John P D Arcy record producer Daniel Levitin served as a consultant and golden ears for the design of the crossover network used to partition the frequency spectrum so that the subwoofer would not attempt to reproduce frequencies too high for its effective range and so that the main speakers would not need to handle frequencies too low for their effective range In 1976 Kreisel created the first satellite speakers and subwoofer system named David and Goliath 14 Subwoofers received a great deal of publicity in 1974 with the movie Earthquake which was released in Sensurround Initially installed in 17 U S theaters the Cerwin Vega Sensurround system used large subwoofers that were driven by racks of 500 watt amplifiers triggered by control tones printed on one of the audio tracks on the film Four of the subwoofers were positioned in front of the audience under or behind the film screen and two more were placed together at the rear of the audience on a platform Powerful noise energy and loud rumbling in the range of 17 to 120 Hz were generated at the level of 110 120 decibels of sound pressure level abbreviated dB SPL The new low frequency entertainment method helped the film become a box office success More Sensurround systems were assembled and installed By 1976 there were almost 300 Sensurround systems leapfrogging through select theaters Other films to use the effect include the WW II naval battle epic Midway in 1976 and Rollercoaster in 1977 15 For owners of 33 rpm LPs and 45 rpm singles loud and deep bass was limited by the ability of the phonograph record stylus to track the groove 5 While some hi fi aficionados had solved the problem by using other playback sources such as reel to reel tape players which were capable of delivering accurate naturally deep bass from acoustic sources or synthetic bass not found in nature with the popular introduction of the compact cassette in the late 1960s it became possible to add more low frequency content to recordings 16 By the mid 1970s 12 inch vinyl singles which allowed for more bass volume were used to record disco reggae dub and hip hop tracks dance club DJs played these records in clubs with subwoofers to achieve physical and emotional reactions from dancers 17 In the early 1970s David Mancuso hired sound engineer Alex Rosner 18 to design additional subwoofers for his disco dance events along with tweeter arrays to boost the treble and bass at opportune moments at his private underground parties at The Loft 19 The demand for sub bass sound reinforcement in the 1970s was driven by the important role of powerful bass drum in disco as compared with rock and pop to provide this deeper range a third crossover point from 40 to 120 Hz centering on 80 Hz was added 8 The Paradise Garage discotheque in New York City which operated from 1977 to 1987 had custom designed sub bass speakers developed by Alex Rosner s disciple sound engineer Richard Dick Long 18 that were called Levan Horns in honor of resident DJ Larry Levan 17 By the end of the 1970s subwoofers were used in dance venue sound systems to enable the playing of b ass heavy dance music that we do not hear with our ears but with our entire body 19 At the club Long used four Levan bass horns one in each corner of the dancefloor to create a haptic and tactile quality in the sub bass that you could feel in your body 20 To overcome the lack of sub bass frequencies on 1970s disco records sub bass frequencies below 60 Hz were removed during mastering Long added a DBX 100 Boom Box subharmonic pitch generator into his system to synthesize 25 to 50 Hz sub bass from the 50 to 100 Hz bass on the records 20 By the later 1970s disco club sound engineers were using the same large Cerwin Vega Sensurround style folded horn subwoofers that were used in Earthquake and similar movies in dance club system installations 8 In the early 1980s Long designed a sound system for the Warehouse dance club with huge stacks of subwoofers which created deep and intense bass frequencies that pound ed through your system and entire body enabling clubgoers to viscerally experience the DJs house music mixes 21 A crew sets up a sound system including large bass bins in Jamaica in 2009 In Jamaica in the 1970s and 1980s sound engineers for reggae sound systems began creating heavily customized subwoofer enclosures by adding foam and tuning the cabinets to achieve rich and articulate speaker output below 100 Hz 22 The sound engineers who developed the bass heavy signature sound of sound reinforcement systems have been called deserving as much credit for the sound of Jamaican music as their better known music producer cousins 23 The sound engineers for Stone Love Movement a sound system crew for example modified folded horn subwoofers they imported from the US to get more of a bass reflex sound that suited local tone preferences for dancehall audiences as the unmodified folded horn was found to be too aggressive sounding and not deep enough for Jamaican listeners 22 In sound system culture there are both low and high bass bins in towering piles that are delivered in large trucks and set up by a crew of box boys and then positioned and adjusted by the sound engineer in a process known as stringing up all to create the sound of reggae music you can literally feel as it comes off these big speakers 24 Sound system crews hold sound clash competitions where each sound system is set up and then the two crews try to outdo each other 25 both in terms of loudness and the bass it produced 26 The 1987 Bose Acoustimass 5 stereo bass driver contained one six inch 152 mm driver per channel and provided crossover filtering for its two cube speaker arrays 27 In the 1980s the Bose Acoustimass AM 5 became a popular subwoofer and small high range satellite speaker system for home listening 28 Steve Feinstein stated that with the AM 5 the system s appearance mattered as much as if not more than great sound to consumers of this era as it was considered to be a cool look 28 The success of the AM 5 led to other makers launching subwoofer satellite speaker systems including Boston Acoustics Sub Sat 6 and 7 and the Cambridge SoundWorks Ensemble systems by Kloss 28 Claims that these sub satellite systems showed manufacturers and designers that home theater systems with a hidden subwoofer could be feasible and workable in a normal living room for mainstream consumers Despite criticism of the AM 5 from audio experts regarding a lack of bass range below 60 Hz an acoustic hole in the 120 to 200 Hz range and a lack of upper range above 13 kHz for the satellites the AM 5 system represented 30 of the US speaker market in the early 1990s 28 In the 1980s Origin Acoustics developed the first residential in wall subwoofer named Composer It used an aluminum 10 inch 25 4 cm driver and a foam lined enclosure designed to be mounted directly into wall studs during the construction of a new home 29 The frequency response for the Composer is 30 to 250 Hz 30 1990s to 2010s Edit While in the 1960s and 1970s deep bass speakers were once an exotic commodity owned by audiophiles by the mid 1990s they were much more popular and widely used with different sizes and capabilities of sound output 31 An example of 1990s subwoofer use in sound reinforcement is the Ministry of Sound dance club which opened in 1991 in London The dancefloor s sound system was based on Richard Long s design at Paradise Garage The club spent about 500 000 on a sound system that used Martin Audio components in custom built cabinets including twelve 21 9 500 watt active subwoofers twelve 18 inch subwoofers and twelve Martin Audio W8C mid high speakers 32 The popularity of the CD made it possible to add more low frequency content to recordings and satisfy a larger number of consumers 16 Home subwoofers grew in popularity as they were easy to add to existing multimedia speaker setups and they were easy to position or hide 33 In 2018 some electronic dance music EDM sound systems for venues that play hardcore bass have multiple subwoofer arrays to deal with mid bass 80 150 Hz bass 40 80 Hz and infra bass 20 40 Hz 34 In 2015 Damon Krukowski wrote an article entitled Drop the Bass A Case Against Subwoofers for Pitchfork magazine based on his performing experience with Galaxie 500 he argues that for certain styles of music especially acoustic music genres these low end behemoths are actually ruining our listening experience by reducing the clarity of the low end 35 In 2015 John Hunter from REL Acoustics stated that audiophiles tend to have a love hate relationship with subwoofers because most subs have awful entry level sound quality and they are used in an inappropriate way without integrating the bass seamlessly 36 Construction and features EditLoudspeaker and enclosure design Edit Cross section of a subwoofer drive unit Subwoofers use speaker drivers woofers typically between 8 inch 20 cm and 21 inch 53 cm in diameter Some uncommon subwoofers use larger drivers and single prototype subwoofers as large as 60 inch 152 cm have been fabricated 37 On the smaller end of the spectrum subwoofer drivers as small as 4 inch 10 cm may be used Small subwoofer drivers in the 4 inch range are typically used in small computer speaker systems and compact home theatre subwoofer cabinets The size of the driver and number of drivers in a cabinet depends on the design of the loudspeaker enclosure the size of the cabinet the desired sound pressure level the lowest frequency targeted and the level of permitted distortion The most common subwoofer driver sizes used for sound reinforcement in nightclubs raves and pop rock concerts are 10 12 15 and 18 inch models 25 cm 30 cm 38 cm and 45 cm respectively The largest available sound reinforcement subwoofers 21 inch 53 cm drivers are less commonly seen The efficiency of a speaker driver is given by h 0 4 p 2 F s 3 V a s c 3 Q e s 100 displaystyle eta 0 left frac 4 pi 2 F s 3 V as c 3 Q es right times 100 where the variables are Thiele Small parameters Deep low frequency extension is a common goal for a subwoofer and small box volumes are also considered desirable to save space and reduce the size for ease of transportation in the case of sound reinforcement and DJ subwoofers Hofmann s Iron Law therefore mandates low efficiency under those constraints and indeed most subwoofers require considerable power much more than other individual drivers So for the example of a sealed speaker box the box volume to achieve a given Q t s displaystyle Q t s is proportional to V a s displaystyle V as V b V a s a displaystyle V b frac V as alpha where a Q t c 2 Q t s 2 1 displaystyle alpha frac Q tc 2 Q ts 2 1 Therefore a decrease in box volume i e a smaller speaker cabinet and the same F 3 displaystyle F 3 will decrease the efficiency of the subwoofer Similarly the F 3 displaystyle F 3 of a speaker is proportional to F s displaystyle F s F c Q t c F s Q t s displaystyle F c frac Q tc F s Q ts As the efficiency is proportional to F s 3 displaystyle F s 3 small improvements in low frequency extension with the same driver and box volume will result in very significant reductions in efficiency For these reasons subwoofers are typically very inefficient at converting electrical energy into sound energy This combination of factors accounts for the higher amplifier power required to drive subwoofers and the requirement for greater power handling for subwoofer drivers Enclosure variations e g bass reflex designs with a port in the cabinet are often used for subwoofers to increase the efficiency of the driver enclosure system helping to reduce the amplifier power requirements Bass reflex enclosure schematic cross section Heavily braced and built subwoofer enclosure Subwoofers are typically constructed by mounting one or more woofers in a cabinet of medium density fibreboard MDF oriented strand board OSB plywood fiberglass aluminum or other stiff materials Because of the high air pressure they produce in the cabinet subwoofer enclosures often require internal bracing to distribute the resulting forces Subwoofers have been designed using a number of enclosure approaches bass reflex with a port or vent using a subwoofer and one or more passive radiator speakers in the enclosure acoustic suspension sealed enclosure infinite baffle horn loaded tapped horn transmission line and bandpass Each enclosure type has advantages and disadvantages in terms of efficiency increase bass extension cabinet size distortion and cost Multiple enclosure types may even be combined in a single design such as in computer audio with the subwoofer design of the Labtec LCS 2424 later acquired by Logitech and used for their Z340 Z540 Z640 Z3 Z4 which is a primitive passive radiator bandpass enclosure with a bass reflex dividing chamber While not necessarily an enclosure type isobaric such as push pull coupled loading of two drivers has sometimes been used in subwoofer products of computer 38 home cinema 39 and sound reinforcement 40 class and also DIY versions in automotive applications to provide relatively deep bass for their size Self contained isobaric like driver assemblies have been manufactured since the 2010s 41 42 43 The smallest subwoofers are typically those designed for desktop multimedia systems The largest common subwoofer enclosures are those used for concert sound reinforcement systems or dance club sound systems An example of a large concert subwoofer enclosure is the 1980s era Electro Voice MT 4 Bass Cube system which used four 18 inch 45 cm drivers An example of a subwoofer that uses a bass horn is the Bassmaxx B Two which loads an 18 inch 45 cm driver onto an 11 foot 3 4 m long folded horn Folded horn type subwoofers can typically produce a deeper range with greater efficiency than the same driver in an enclosure that lacks a horn However folded horn cabinets are typically larger and heavier than front firing enclosures so folded horns are less commonly used Some experimental fixed installation subwoofer horns have been constructed using brick and concrete to produce a very long horn that allows a very deep sub bass extension 44 Subwoofer output level can be increased by increasing cone surface area or by increasing cone excursion Since large drivers require undesirably large cabinets most subwoofer drivers have large excursions Unfortunately high excursion at high power levels tends to produce more distortion from inherent mechanical and magnetic effects in electro dynamic drivers the most common sort The conflict between assorted goals can never be fully resolved subwoofer designs necessarily involve tradeoffs and compromises Hofmann s Iron Law the efficiency of a woofer system is directly proportional to its cabinet volume as in size and to the cube of its cutoff frequency that is how low in pitch it will go applies to subwoofers just as it does to all loudspeakers 45 Thus a subwoofer enclosure designer aiming at the deepest pitched bass will probably have to consider using a large enclosure size a subwoofer enclosure designer instructed to create the smallest possible cabinet to make transportation easier will need to compromise how low in pitch their cabinet will go Frequency range and frequency response Edit A large subwoofer cabinet used in a home hi fi system For home use the bass driver with its 61 cm diameter 24 inch is way out of the typical size range The frequency response specification of a speaker describes the range of frequencies or musical tones a speaker can reproduce measured in hertz Hz 46 The typical frequency range for a subwoofer is between 20 200 Hz 1 Professional concert sound system subwoofers typically operate below 100 Hz 2 and THX certified systems operate below 80 Hz 3 Subwoofers vary in terms of the range of pitches that they can reproduce depending on a number of factors such as the size of the cabinet and the construction and design of the enclosure and driver s Specifications of frequency response depend wholly for relevance on an accompanying amplitude value measurements taken with a wider amplitude tolerance will give any loudspeaker a wider frequency response For example the JBL 4688 TCB Subwoofer System a now discontinued system which was designed for movie theaters had a frequency response of 23 350 Hz when measured within a 10 decibel boundary 0 dB to 10 dB and a narrower frequency response of 28 120 Hz when measured within a 6 decibel boundary 3 dB 47 Subwoofers also vary in regard to the sound pressure levels achievable and the distortion levels that they produce over their range Some subwoofers such as The Abyss by MartinLogan for example can reproduce pitches down to around 18 Hz which is about the pitch of the lowest rumbling notes on a huge pipe organ with 32 foot 9 8 m 16 Hz bass pipes to 120 Hz 3 dB Nevertheless even though the Abyss subwoofer can go down to 18 Hz its lowest frequency and maximum SPL with a limit of 10 distortion is 35 5 Hz and 79 8 dB at 2 meters 48 This means that a person choosing a subwoofer needs to consider more than just the lowest pitch that the subwoofer can reproduce Amplification Edit This picture of the internal components of an active powered subwoofer shows the circuitry for the power amplifier Active subwoofers include their own dedicated amplifiers within the cabinet Some also include user adjustable equalization that allows boosted or reduced output at particular frequencies these vary from a simple boost switch to fully parametric equalizers meant for detailed speaker and room correction Some such systems are even supplied with a calibrated microphone to measure the subwoofer s in room response so the automatic equalizer can correct the combination of subwoofer subwoofer location and room response to minimize the effects of room modes and improve low frequency performance This rear panel of a powered subwoofer shows the heat sinks used to cool the power amplifier Passive subwoofers have a subwoofer driver and enclosure but they do not include an amplifier They sometimes incorporate internal passive crossovers with the filter frequency determined at the factory These are generally used with third party power amplifiers taking their inputs from active crossovers earlier in the signal chain Inexpensive Home Theatre in a Box packages often come with a passive subwoofer cabinet that is amplified by the multi channel amplifier While few high end home theater systems use passive subwoofers this format is still popular in the professional sound industry 49 Equalization Edit This picture of the rear panel of a Polk subwoofer cabinet shows a low pass filter adjustment knob Equalization can be used to adjust the in room response of a subwoofer system 50 Designers of active subwoofers sometimes include a degree of corrective equalization to compensate for known performance issues e g a steeper than desired low end roll off rate In addition many amplifiers include an adjustable low pass filter which prevents undesired higher frequencies from reaching the subwoofer driver For example if a listener s main speakers are usable down to 80 Hz then the subwoofer filter can be set so the subwoofer only works below 80 Hz 3 Typical filters involve some overlap in frequency ranges a steep 4th order 24 dB octave low pass filter is generally desired for subwoofers in order to minimize the overlap region The filter section may also include a high pass infrasonic or subsonic filter which prevents the subwoofer driver from attempting to reproduce frequencies below its safe capabilities Setting an infrasonic filter is important on bass reflex subwoofer cabinets as the bass reflex design tends to create the risk of cone overexcursion at pitches below those of the port tuning which can cause distortion and damage the subwoofer driver For example in a ported subwoofer enclosure tuned to 30 Hz one may wish to filter out pitches below the tuning frequency that is frequencies below 30 Hz Some systems use parametric equalization in an attempt to correct for room frequency response irregularities 51 Equalization is often unable to achieve flat frequency response at all listening locations in part because of the resonance i e standing wave patterns at low frequencies in nearly all rooms Careful positioning of the subwoofer within the room can also help flatten the frequency response 52 Multiple subwoofers can manage a flatter general response since they can often be arranged to excite room modes more evenly than a single subwoofer allowing equalization to be more effective 53 Phase control Edit The rear panel of a down firing active subwoofer cabinet Changing the relative phase of the subwoofer with respect to the woofers in other speakers may or may not help to minimize unwanted destructive acoustic interference in the frequency region covered by both the subwoofer and the main speakers It may not help at all frequencies and may create further problems with frequency response but even so is generally provided as an adjustment for subwoofer amplifiers 54 Phase control circuits may be a simple polarity reversal switch or a more complex continuously variable circuit Continuously variable phase control circuits are common in subwoofer amplifiers and may be found in crossovers and as do it yourself electronics projects 55 56 57 58 59 Phase controls allow the listener to change the arrival time of the subwoofer sound waves relative to the same frequencies from the main speakers i e at and around the crossover point to the subwoofer A similar effect can be achieved with the delay control on many home theater receivers The subwoofer phase control found on many subwoofer amplifiers is actually a polarity inversion switch 60 It allows users to reverse the polarity of the subwoofer relative to the audio signal it is being given This type of control allows the subwoofer to either be in phase with the source signal or 180 degrees out of phase The subwoofer phase can still be changed by moving the subwoofer closer to or further from the listening position however this may not be always practical Servo subwoofers Edit Some active subwoofers use a servo feedback mechanism based on cone movement that modifies the signal sent to the voice coil The servo feedback signal is derived from a comparison of the input signal to the amplifier versus the actual motion of the cone The usual source of the feedback signal is a few turns of voice coil attached to the cone or a microchip based accelerometer placed on the cone itself 61 62 An advantage of a well implemented servo subwoofer design is reduced distortion making smaller enclosure sizes possible 63 The primary disadvantages are cost and complexity 64 Servo controlled subwoofers are not the same as Tom Danley s ServoDrive subwoofers whose primary mechanism of sound reproduction avoids the normal voice coil and magnet combination in favor of a high speed belt driven servomotor The ServoDrive design increases output power reduces harmonic distortion and virtually eliminates power compression the loss of loudspeaker output that results from an increase in voice coil impedance due to overheating of the voice coil This feature allows high power operation for extended periods of time 65 66 67 Intersonics was nominated for a TEC Award for its ServoDrive Loudspeaker SDL design in 1986 and for the Bass Tech 7 model in 1990 68 69 Applications EditHome audio Edit Basic sealed subwoofer in a residential setting The use of a subwoofer augments the bass capability of the main speakers and allows them to be smaller without sacrificing low frequency capability A subwoofer does not necessarily provide superior bass performance in comparison to large conventional loudspeakers on ordinary music recordings due to the typical lack of very low frequency content on such sources However there are recordings with substantial low frequency content that most conventional loudspeakers are ill equipped to handle without the help of a subwoofer especially at high playback levels such as music for pipe organs with 32 9 75 meter bass pipes 16 Hz very large bass drums on symphony orchestra recordings and electronic music with extremely low synth bass parts such as bass tests or bass songs Frequencies which are sufficiently low are not easily localized by humans hence many stereo and multichannel audio systems feature only one subwoofer channel and a single subwoofer can be placed off center without affecting the perceived sound stage since the sound that it produces will be difficult to localize The intention in a system with a subwoofer is often to use small main speakers of which there are two for stereo and five or more for surround sound or movie tracks and to hide the subwoofer elsewhere e g behind furniture or under a table or to augment an existing speaker to save it from having to handle woofer destroying low frequencies at high levels This effect is possible only if the subwoofer is restricted to quite low frequencies usually taken to be say 100 Hz and below still less localization is possible if restricted to even lower maximum frequencies Higher upper limits for the subwoofer e g 125 Hz are much more easily localized making a single subwoofer impractical Home theatre systems typically use one subwoofer cabinet the 1 in 5 1 surround sound However to improve bass distribution in a room that has multiple seating locations and prevent node or null points with weakened bass response some home cinema enthusiasts use 5 2 or 7 2 surround sound systems with two subwoofer cabinets in the same room 70 Some users add a subwoofer because high levels of low frequency bass are desired even beyond what is in the original recording as in the case of house music enthusiasts Thus subwoofers may be part of a package that includes satellite speakers may be purchased separately or may be built into the same cabinet as a conventional speaker system For instance some floor standing tower speakers include a subwoofer driver in the lower portion of the same cabinet Physical separation of subwoofer and satellite speakers not only allows placement in an inconspicuous location but since sub bass frequencies are particularly sensitive to room location due to room resonances and reverberation modes the best position for the subwoofer is not likely to be where the satellite speakers are located Higher end home theater systems and enthusiasts may also opt to take low frequency bass reproduction even further by incorporating 2 or more external subwoofers 71 Having two subwoofers placed around the living room ensures even distribution of bass reducing subwoofer localization and pressurizing the room with low frequency notes that can be felt just like the cinemas 72 For greatest efficiency and best coupling to the room s air volume subwoofers can be placed in a corner of the room far from large room openings and closer to the listener This is possible since low bass frequencies have a long wavelength hence there is little difference between the information reaching a listener s left and right ears and so they cannot be readily localized All low frequency information is sent to the subwoofer However unless the sound tracks have been carefully mixed for a single subwoofer channel it is possible to have some cancellation of low frequencies if bass information in one channel s speaker is out of phase with another The physically separate subwoofer satellite arrangement with small satellite speakers and a large subwoofer cabinet that can be hidden behind furniture has been popularized by multimedia speaker systems such as Bose Acoustimass Home Entertainment Systems Polk Audio RM2008 Series and Klipsch Audio Technologies ProMedia among many others 73 74 Low cost home theater in a box systems advertise their integration and simplicity A small subwoofer cabinet designed for use with a home computer Particularly among lower cost Home Theater in a Box systems and with boom boxes however the inclusion of a subwoofer may be little more than a marketing technique It is unlikely that a small woofer in an inexpensively built compact plastic cabinet will have better bass performance than well designed conventional and typically larger speakers in a plywood or MDF cabinet Mere use of the term subwoofer is no guarantee of good or extended bass performance Many multimedia subwoofers might better be termed mid bass cabinets 60 to 160 Hz as they are too small to produce deep bass in the 30 to 59 Hz range 75 Further poorly designed systems often leave everything below about 120 Hz or even higher to the subwoofer meaning that the subwoofer handles frequencies which the ear can use for sound source localization thus introducing an undesirable subwoofer localization effect This is usually due to poor crossover designs or choices too high a crossover point or insufficient crossover slope used in many computer and home theater systems localization also comes from port noise 76 and from typically large amounts of harmonic distortion in the subwoofer design 77 Home subwoofers sold individually usually include crossover circuitry to assist with the integration of the subwoofer into an existing system Car audio Edit Multiple subwoofers in a hatchback car Automobiles are not well suited for the hidden subwoofer approach due to space limitations in the passenger compartments It is not possible in most circumstances to fit such large drivers and enclosures into doors or dashboards so subwoofers are installed in the trunk or back seat space Some car audio enthusiasts compete to produce very high sound pressure levels in the confines of their vehicle s cabin sometimes dangerously high sound pressure levels The SPL wars have drawn much attention to subwoofers in general but subjective competitions in sound quality SQ have not gained equivalent popularity Top SPL cars are not able to play normal music or perhaps even to drive normally as they are designed solely for competition Many non competition subwoofers are also capable of generating high levels in cars due to the small volume of a typical car interior High sound levels can cause hearing loss and tinnitus if one is exposed to them for an extended period of time 78 In the 2000s several car audio manufacturers produced subwoofers using non circular shapes including Boston Acoustic Kicker Sony Bazooka and X Tant Other major car audio manufacturers like Rockford Fosgate did not follow suit since non circular subwoofer shapes typically carry some sort of distortion penalties 79 80 81 In situations of limited mounting space they provide a greater cone area and assuming all other variables are constant greater maximum output An important factor in the square sub vs round sub argument is the effects of the enclosure used In a sealed enclosure the maximum displacement is determined byV d x m a x S d displaystyle V mathrm d x mathrm max times S mathrm d where Vd is the volume of displacement in m3 xmax is the amount of linear excursion the speaker is mechanically capable of in m Sd is the cone area of the subwoofer in m2 These are some of the Thiele Small parameters which can either be measured or found with the driver specifications Cinema sound Edit After the introduction of Sensurround movie theater owners began installing permanent subwoofer systems Dolby Stereo 70 mm Six Track was a six channel film sound format introduced in 1976 that used two subwoofer channels for stereo reproduction of low frequencies In 1981 Altec introduced a dedicated cinema subwoofer model tuned to around 20 Hz the 8182 Starting in 1983 THX certification of the cinema sound experience quantified the parameters of good audio for watching films including requirements for subwoofer performance levels and enough isolation from outside sounds so that noise did not interfere with the listening experience 82 This helped provide guidelines for multiplex cinema owners who wanted to isolate each individual cinema from its neighbors even as louder subwoofers were making isolation more difficult Specific cinema subwoofer models appeared from JBL Electro Voice Eastern Acoustic Works Kintek Meyer Sound Laboratories and BGW Systems in the early 1990s In 1992 Dolby Digital s six channel film sound format incorporated a single LFE channel the point one in 5 1 surround sound systems Tom Horral a Boston based acoustician blames complaints about modern movies being too loud on subwoofers He says that before subwoofers made it possible to have loud relatively undistorted bass movie sound levels were limited by the distortion in less capable systems at low frequency and high levels 83 Sound reinforcement Edit Each stack of speakers in this sound reinforcement setup consists of two EAW SB1000 slanted baffle subwoofers each contains two 18 inch drivers and two EAW KF850 full range cabinets for the mid and high frequencies Professional audio subwoofers used in rock concerts in stadia DJ performances at dance music venues e g electronic dance music and similar events must be capable of very high bass output levels at very low frequencies with low distortion This is reflected in the design attention given in the 2010s to the subwoofer applications for sound reinforcement public address systems dance club systems and concert systems Cerwin Vega states that when a subwoofer cabinet is added to an existing full range speaker system this is advantageous as it moves the lowest frequencies from your main full range PA speakers thus eliminat ing a large amount of the excess work that your main top full range box was trying to reproduce As a result your main full range cabinets will run more efficiently and at higher volumes 84 A different argument for adding subwoofer cabinets is that they may increase the level of clarity and perceived loudness of an overall PA system even if the SPL is not actually increased 85 Sound on Sound states that adding a subwoofer enclosure to a full range system will reduce cone excursion thus lowering distortion leading to an overall cleaner sound 86 Consumer applications as in home use are considerably less demanding due to much smaller listening space and lower playback levels Subwoofers are now almost universal in professional sound applications such as live concert sound churches nightclubs and theme parks Movie theatres certified to the THX standard for playback always include high capability subwoofers Some professional applications require subwoofers designed for very high sound levels using multiple 12 15 18 or 21 inch drivers 30 cm 40 cm 45 cm 53 cm respectively Drivers as small as 10 inch 25 cm are occasionally used generally in horn loaded enclosures The number of subwoofer enclosures used in a concert depends on a number of factors including the size of the venue whether it is indoors or outdoors the amount of low frequency content in the band s sound the desired volume of the concert and the design and construction of the enclosures e g direct radiating versus horn loaded A tiny coffeehouse may only need a single 10 inch subwoofer cabinet to augment the bass provided by the full range speakers A small bar may use one or two direct radiating 15 inch 40 cm subwoofer cabinets A large dance club may have a row of four or five twin 18 inch 45 cm subwoofer cabinets or more In the largest stadium venues there may be a very large number of subwoofer enclosures For example the 2009 2010 U2 360 Tour used 24 Clair Brothers BT 218 subwoofers a double 18 inch 45 cm box around the perimeter of the central circular stage and 72 proprietary Clair Brothers cardioid S4 subwoofers placed underneath the ring shaped B stage which encircles the central main stage 87 88 A row of subwoofer cabinets in front of the stage of a rock concert One enclosure out of every stack of three is turned backward to make a cardioid output pattern The main speakers may be flown from the ceiling of a venue on chain hoists and flying points i e attachment points are built into many professional loudspeaker enclosures Subwoofers can be flown or stacked on the ground near the stage One of the reasons subwoofers may be installed on the ground is that on the ground installation can increase the bass performance particularly if the subwoofer is placed in the corner of a room conversely if a subwoofer cabinet is perceived as too loud alternatives to on the ground or in corner installation may be considered There can be more than 50 double 18 inch 45 cm cabinets in a typical rock concert system Just as consumer subwoofer enclosures can be made of medium density fibreboard MDF oriented strand board OSB plywood plastic or other dense material professional subwoofer enclosures can be built from the same materials 89 90 MDF is commonly used to construct subwoofers for permanent installations as its density is relatively high and weatherproofing is not a concern Other permanent installation subwoofers have used very thick plywood the Altec 8182 1981 used 7 ply 28 mm birch faced oak plywood 91 Touring subwoofers are typically built from 18 20 mm thick void free Baltic birch Betula pendula or Betula pubescens plywood from Finland Estonia or Russia such plywood affords greater strength for frequently transported enclosures 92 Not naturally weatherproof Baltic birch is coated with carpet thick paint or spray on truck bedliner to give the subwoofer enclosures greater durability 93 94 Large subwoofer enclosures Touring subwoofer cabinets are typically designed with features that facilitate moving the enclosure e g wheels a towel bar handle and recessed handles a protective grille for the speaker in direct radiating style cabinets metal or plastic protection for the cabinets to protect the finish as the cabinets are being slid one on top of another and hardware to facilitate stacking the cabinets e g interlocking corners and for flying the cabinets from stage rigging In the 2000s many small to mid size subwoofers designed for bands live sound use and DJ applications are powered subs that is they have an integrated power amplifier These models typically have a built in crossover Some models have a metal reinforced hole in which a speaker pole can be mounted for elevating full frequency range cabinets Use in a full range system Edit In professional concert sound system design subwoofers can be incorporated seamlessly with the main speakers into a stereo or mono full range system by using an active crossover The audio engineer typically adjusts the frequency point at which lower frequency sounds are routed to the subwoofer speaker s and mid frequency and higher frequency sounds are sent to the full range speakers Such a system receives its signal from the main mono or stereo mixing console mix bus and amplifies all frequencies together in the desired balance If the main sound system is stereo the subwoofers can also be in stereo Otherwise a mono subwoofer channel can be derived within the crossover from a stereo mix depending on the crossover make and model While 2010 era subwoofer cabinet manufacturers suggest placing subwoofers on either side of a stage as implied by the inclusion of pole cups for the full range PA cabinets Dave Purton argues that for club gigs having two subwoofer cabinets on either side of a stage will lead to gaps in bass coverage in the venue he states that putting the two subwoofer cabinets together will create a more even omnidirectional sub bass tone 86 PA systems by size and subwoofer approach PA system set up Venue sizeSmall system Two pole mounted mid high frequency PA speaker cabinets and two small subwoofer cabinets with 15 or 18 inch subwoofers Note this would be used in club where jazz acoustic music country music or soft rock is played Small club with capacity for up to 300 peopleSmall high amplifier power system 2 high amplifier power rated mid high frequency PA speakers with 15 inch woofers and a large horn loaded tweeter two high amplifier power rated subwoofer cabinets with one or two 18 inch subwoofer cabs front firing also known as front loaded or manifold loaded subwoofer cabinets Small club with capacity for up to 500 peopleMid size PA system 4 larger multiwoofer mid high frequency PA speaker cabs e g each with two 15 inch woofers and four subwoofer cabinets either front firing manifold loaded or a folded horn Large clubs with capacity for 500 people small music festivals fairsLarge size PA system Multiple mid high frequency PA speakers possibly flown up high in rigging and a number of subwoofer cabinets either front firing manifold loaded or folded horn Large venues with capacity for 1000 people larger music festivals 84 Aux fed subwoofers Edit Instead of being incorporated into a full range system concert subwoofers can be supplied with their own signal from a separate mix bus on the mixing console often one of the auxiliary sends aux or auxes is used This configuration is called aux fed subwoofers and has been observed to significantly reduce low frequency muddiness that can build up in a concert sound system which has on stage a number of microphones each picking up low frequencies and each having different phase relationships of those low frequencies 2 The aux fed subwoofers method greatly reduces the number of sources feeding the subwoofers to include only those instruments that have desired low frequency information sources such as kick drum bass guitar samplers and keyboard instruments This simplifies the signal sent to the subwoofers and makes for greater clarity and low punch 95 Aux fed subwoofers can even be stereo if desired using two auxiliary mix buses Directional bass Edit Cardioid dispersion pattern of two end fire subwoofers placed one in front of the other The signal feeding the enclosure nearest the listener is delayed by a few milliseconds 96 To keep low frequency sound focused on the audience area and not on the stage and to keep low frequencies from bothering people outside of the event space a variety of techniques have been developed in concert sound to turn the naturally omnidirectional radiation of subwoofers into a more directional pattern Several examples of sound reinforcement system applications where sound engineers seek to provide more directional bass sound are music festivals which often have several bands performing at the same time on different stages large raves or EDM events where there are multiple DJs performing at the same time in different rooms or stages and multiplex movie theatres in which there are many films being shown simultaneously in auditoriums that share common walls These techniques include setting up subwoofers in a vertical array using combinations of delay and polarity inversion and setting up a delay shaded system With a cardioid dispersion pattern two end fire subwoofers can be placed one in front of the other The enclosure nearest the listener is delayed by a few milliseconds The second subwoofer is delayed a precise amount corresponding to the time it takes sound to traverse the distance between speaker grilles Vertical array Edit Stacking or rigging the subwoofers in a vertical array focuses the low frequencies forward to a greater or lesser extent depending on the physical length of the array Longer arrays have a more directional effect at lower frequencies The directionality is more pronounced in the vertical dimension yielding a radiation pattern that is wide but not tall This helps reduce the amount of low frequency sound bouncing off the ceiling indoors and assists in mitigating external noise complaints outdoors Rear delay array Edit CSA Six subwoofers arranged for less bass energy on stage Signal going to the reversed enclosures is delayed a few milliseconds Another cardioid subwoofer array pattern can be used horizontally one which takes few channels of processing and no change in required physical space This method is often called cardioid subwoofer array or CSA 97 even though the pattern of all directional subwoofer methods is cardioid The CSA method reverses the enclosure orientation and inverts the polarity of one out of every three subwoofers across the front of the stage and delays those enclosures for maximum cancellation of the target frequency on stage Polarity inversion can be implemented electronically by reversing the wiring polarity or by physically positioning the enclosure to face rearward This method reduces forward output relative to a tight packed flat fronted array of subwoofers but can solve problems of unwanted low frequency energy coming into microphones on stage Compared to the end fire array this method has less on axis energy but more even pattern control throughout the audience and more predictable cancellation rearward The effect spans a range of slightly more than one octave 97 A second method of rear delay array combines end fire topology with polarity reversal using two subwoofers positioned front to back the drivers spaced one quarter wavelength apart the rear enclosure inverted in polarity and delayed by a few milliseconds for maximum cancellation on stage of the target frequency 98 This method has the least output power directed toward the audience compared to other directional methods End fire array Edit End fire array using three rows of subwoofers Each row is delayed a few milliseconds more than the previous row The end fire subwoofer method also called forward steered arrays 99 places subwoofer drivers co axially in one or more rows using destructive interference to reduce emissions to the sides and rear This can be done with separate subwoofer enclosures positioned front to back with a spacing between them of one quarter wavelength of the target frequency the frequency that is least wanted on stage or most desired in the audience Each row is delayed beyond the first row by an amount related to the speed of sound in air the delay is typically a few milliseconds The arrival time of sound energy from all the subwoofers is near simultaneous from the audience s perspective but is canceled out to a large degree behind the subwoofers because of offset sound wave arrival times Directionality of the target frequency can achieve as much as 25 dB rear attenuation and the forward sound is coherently summed in line with the subwoofers 100 The positional technique of end fire subwoofers came into widespread use in European live concert sound in 2006 101 The end fire array trades a few decibels of output power for directionality so it requires more enclosures for the same output power as a tight packed flat fronted array of enclosures Sixteen enclosures in four rows were used in 2007 at one of the stages of the Ultra Music Festival to reduce low frequency interference to neighboring stages 102 Because of the physical size of the end fire array few concert venues are able to implement it The output pattern suffers from comb filtering off axis but can be further shaped by adjusting the frequency response of each row of subwoofers 99 Delay shaded array Edit A long line of subwoofers placed horizontally along the front edge of the stage can be delayed such that the center subwoofers fire several milliseconds prior to the ones flanking them which fire several milliseconds prior to their neighbors continuing in this fashion until the last subwoofers are reached at the outside ends of the subwoofer row beamforming This method helps to counteract the extreme narrowing of the horizontal dispersion pattern seen with a horizontal subwoofer array Such delay shading can be used to virtually reshape a loudspeaker array 103 Directional enclosure Edit Some subwoofer enclosure designs rely on drivers facing to the sides or to the rear in order to achieve a degree of directionality 104 105 End fire drivers can be positioned within a single enclosure that houses more than one driver 106 Variants Edit Some less commonly used bass enclosures are variants of the subwoofer enclosure s normal range such as the mid bass cabinet 60 160 Hz and the infrasonic extra low subwoofer below 30 Hz Enclosure designs Edit Compound or 4th order band pass enclosure Front loaded subwoofers have one or more subwoofer speakers in a cabinet typically with a grille to protect the speakers In practice many front loaded subwoofer cabinets have a vent or port in the speaker cabinet thus creating a bass reflex enclosure Even though a bass reflex port or vent creates some additional phase delay it adds SPL which is often a key factor in PA and sound reinforcement system applications As such non vented front firing subwoofer cabinets are rare in pro audio applications Horn loaded subwoofers have a subwoofer speaker that has a pathway following the loudspeaker To save space the pathway is often folded so that the folded pathway will fit into a box style cabinet Cerwin Vega states that its folded horn subwoofer cabinets on average produce 6 dB more output at 1 watt than a dual 18 inch vented box giving four times the output with half the number of drivers 84 The Cerwin Vega JE 36C has a five feet long folded horn chamber length in the wooden cabinet 84 Manifold subwoofers have two or more subwoofer speakers that feed the throat of a single horn This increases SPL for the subwoofer at the cost of increased distortion EV has a manifold speaker cabinet in which four drivers are mounted as close together as practical This is a different design than the multiple drivers in one throat approach An unusual example of manifold subwoofer design is the Thomas Mundorf TM approach of having four subwoofers facing each other and sitting close together which is used for theatre in the round shows where the audience surrounds the performers in a big circle e g Metallica has used this in some concerts The TM approach produces an omnidirectional bass sound 107 Cerwin Vega defines a manifold enclosure as one in which the driver faces into a tuned ported cavity You hear sound directly from the back of the driver in addition to the sound that emanates out of the port This type of enclosure design extends the frequency capability of the driver lower than it would reproduce by itself 84 Bandpass subwoofers have a sealed cabinet within another cabinet with the outer cabinet typically having a vent or port Bass instrument amplification Edit In rare cases sound reinforcement subwoofer enclosures are also used for bass instrument amplification by electric bass players and synth bass players For most bands and most small to mid size venues e g nightclubs and bars standard bass guitar speaker enclosures or keyboard amplifiers will provide sufficient sound pressure levels for onstage monitoring Since a regular electric bass has a low E 41 Hz as its lowest note most standard bass guitar cabinets are only designed with a range that goes down to about 40 Hz However in some cases performers wish to have extended sub bass response that is not available from standard instrument speaker enclosures so they use subwoofer cabinets Just as some electric guitarists add huge stacks of guitar cabinets mainly for show some bassists will add immense subwoofer cabinets with 18 inch woofers mainly for show and the extension subwoofer cabinets will be operated at a lower volume than the main bass cabinets Bass guitar players who may use subwoofer cabinets include performers who play with extended range basses that include a low B string about 31 Hz bassists who play in styles where a very powerful sub bass response is an important part of the sound e g funk Latin gospel R amp B etc and or bass players who perform in stadium size venues or large outdoor venues Keyboard players who use subwoofers for on stage monitoring include electric organ players who use bass pedal keyboards which go down to a low C which is about 33 Hz and synth bass players who play rumbling sub bass parts that go as low as 18 Hz Of all of the keyboard instruments that are amplified onstage synthesizers can produce some of the lowest pitches because unlike a traditional electric piano or electric organ which have as their lowest notes a low A and a low C respectively a synth does not have a fixed lowest octave A synth player can add lower octaves to a patch by pressing an octave down button which can produce pitches that are at the limits of human hearing Several concert sound subwoofer manufacturers suggest that their subs can be used for bass instrument amplification Meyer Sound suggests that its 650 R2 Concert Series Subwoofer a 14 square foot 1 3 m2 enclosure with two 18 inch drivers 45 cm can be used for bass instrument amplification 108 While performers who use concert sound subwoofers for onstage monitoring may like the powerful sub bass sound that they get onstage sound engineers may find the use of large subwoofers e g two 18 inch drivers 45 cm for onstage instrument monitoring to be problematic because it may interfere with the Front of House sub bass sound Bass shakers EditSince infrasonic bass is felt sub bass can be augmented using tactile transducers Unlike a typical subwoofer driver which produces audible vibrations tactile transducers produce low frequency vibrations that are designed to be felt by individuals who are touching the transducer or indirectly through a piece of furniture or a wooden floor Tactile transducers have recently emerged as a device class called variously bass shakers butt shakers and throne shakers They are attached to a seat for instance a drummer s stool throne or gamer s chair car seat or home theater seating and the vibrations of the driver are transmitted to the body then to the ear in a manner similar to bone conduction 109 110 They connect to an amplifier like a normal subwoofer They can be attached to a large flat surface for instance a floor or platform to create a large low frequency conduction area although the transmission of low frequencies through the feet is not as efficient as through the seat 111 The advantage of tactile transducers used for low frequencies is that they allow a listening environment that is not filled with loud low frequency sound waves in the air This helps the drummer in a rock music band to monitor their kick drum performance without filling the stage with powerful loud low frequency sound from a 15 inch 40 cm subwoofer monitor and an amplifier which can leak into other drum mics and lower the quality of the sound mix By not having a large powerful subwoofer monitor a bass shaker also enables a drummer to lower the sound pressure levels that they are exposed to during a performance reducing the risk of hearing damage For home cinema or video game use bass shakers help the user avoid disturbing others in nearby apartments or rooms because even powerful sound effects such as explosion sounds in a war video game or the simulated rumbling of an earthquake in an adventure film will not be heard by others However some critics argue that the felt vibrations are disconnected from the auditory experience and they claim that that music is less satisfying with the butt shaker than sound effects As well critics have claimed that the bass shaker itself can rattle during loud sound effects which can distract the listener 112 World record claims EditWith varying measures upon which to base claims several subwoofers have been said to be the world s largest loudest or lowest Matterhorn Edit The Matterhorn is a subwoofer model completed in March 2007 by Danley Sound Labs in Gainesville Georgia after a U S military request for a loudspeaker that could project infrasonic waves over a distance The Matterhorn was designed to reproduce a continuous sine wave from 15 to 20 Hz and generate 94 dB at a distance of 250 meters 820 ft and more than 140 dB for music playback measured at the horn mouth 113 It can generate a constant 15 Hz sine wave tone at 140 dB for 24 hours a day seven days a week with extremely low harmonic distortion The subwoofer has a flat frequency response from 15 to 80 Hz and is down 3 dB at 12 Hz 114 It was built within an intermodal container 20 feet 6 1 m long and 8 by 8 feet 2 4 m 2 4 m square 115 The container doors swing open to reveal a tapped horn driven by 40 long throw 15 inch 40 cm MTX speaker drivers each powered by its own 1000 watt amplifier 116 117 The manufacturer claims that 53 13 ply 18 mm 4 by 8 foot 1 2 m 2 4 m sheets of plywood were used in its construction 116 though one of the fabricators wrote that double thickness 26 ply sheets were used for convenience 118 A diesel generator is housed within the enclosure to supply electricity when external power is unavailable 115 Of the constant tone output capability designer Tom Danley wrote that the target 94 dB at 250 meters is not the essentially fictional burst or peak SPL nonsense in pro sound or like the death burp signal used in car sound contests 119 At the annual National Systems Contractors Association NSCA convention in March 2007 the Matterhorn was barred from making any loud demonstrations of its power because of concerns about damaging the building of the Orange County Convention Center 113 Instead using only a single 20 amp electrical circuit for safety visitors were allowed to step inside the horn of the subwoofer for an acoustic massage as the fractionally powered Matterhorn reproduced low level 10 15 Hz waves Royal Device custom installation Edit Another subwoofer claimed to be the world s biggest is a custom installation in Italy made by Royal Device primarily of bricks concrete and sound deadening material 44 consisting of two subwoofers embedded in the foundation of a listening room 120 The horn loaded subwoofers each have a floor mouth that is 2 2 square meters 24 sq ft and a horn length that is 9 5 meters 31 ft in a cavity 1 meter 3 ft 3 in under the floor of the listening room Each subwoofer is driven by eight 18 inch subwoofer drivers with 100 millimeters 3 9 in voice coils The designers assert that the floor mouths of the horns are additionally loaded acoustically by a vertical wooden horn expansion and the room s ceiling to create a 10 Hz full power wave at the listening position Concept Design 60 inch Edit A single 60 inch 1 500 mm diameter subwoofer driver was designed by Richard Clark and David Navone with the help of Dr Eugene Patronis of the Georgia Institute of Technology The driver was intended to break sound pressure level records when mounted in a road vehicle calculated to be able to achieve more than 180 dBSPL It was built in 1997 driven by DC motors connected to a rotary crankshaft somewhat like in a piston engine The cone diameter was 54 inches 1 400 mm and was held in place with a 3 inch 76 mm surround With a 6 inch 150 mm peak to peak stroke it created a one way air displacement of 6 871 cubic inches 112 600 cm3 121 It was capable of generating 5 20 Hz sine waves at various DC motor speeds not as a response to audio signal it could not play music The driver was mounted in a stepvan owned by Tim Maynor but was too powerful for the amount of applied reinforcement and damaged the vehicle 121 MTX s Loyd Ivey helped underwrite the project and the driver was then called the MTX Thunder 1000000 one million 122 Still unfinished the vehicle was entered in an SPL competition in 1997 at which a complaint was lodged against the computer control of the DC motor Instead of using the controller two leads were touched together in the hope that the motor speed was set correctly The drive shaft broke after one positive stroke which created an interior pressure wave of 162 dB The Concept Design 60 inch was not shown in public after 1998 123 MTX Jackhammer Edit The heaviest production subwoofer intended for use in automobiles is the MTX Jackhammer by MTX Audio which features a 22 inch 560 mm diameter cone The Jackhammer has been known to take upwards of 6000 watts sent to a dual voice coil moving within a 900 ounce 26 kg strontium ferrite magnet The Jackhammer weighs in at 369 pounds 167 kg and has an aluminum heat sink 124 The Jackhammer has been featured on the reality TV show Pimp My Ride 125 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Subwoofer Bass management Mid range speaker Power Alley Super tweeter Rotary woofer Thiele Small Tweeter WooferReferences Edit a b Barstow Loren January 18 2010 Home Speakers Glossary Learn Home Crutchfield New Media LLC Retrieved April 24 2010 a b c Young Tom December 1 2008 In Depth The Aux Fed Subwoofer Technique Explained Study Hall ProSoundWeb pp 1 2 Retrieved March 3 2010 a b c DellaSala Gene August 29 2004 Setting the Subwoofer LFE Crossover for Best Performance Tips amp Tricks Get Good Bass Audioholics Retrieved January 19 2021 Glossary of Terms Home Theater Design ETS eTech p 1 Archived from the original on July 23 2012 Retrieved March 3 2010 a b Kogen J H October 1967 Tracking Ability Specifications for Phonograph Cartridges AES E Library Audio Engineering Society Retrieved April 24 2010 a b Fink Robert Below 100 Hz Towards a Musicology of Bass Culture In The Relentless Pursuit of Tone Timbre in Popular Music eds Fink Robert Latour Melinda Wallmark Zachary Oxford University Press 2018 p 105 a b c d e Eargle John M The JBL Story 60 Years of Audio Innovation a b c Hill Adam J Hawksford Malcolm O J Rosenthal Adam P Gand Gary Subwoofer positioning orientation and calibration for large scale sound reinforcement Audio Engineering Society Convention Paper 7981 presented at the 128th Convention May 22 25 2010 London UK Living Legend Altec Lansing s Voice of the Theatre Soundandvision com Sound and Vision December 15 2016 Archived from the original on July 2 2017 Retrieved January 1 2019 Octavium Product brochure Aladdin Electronics Inc Copyright 1965 a b c d Archibald Larry J Gordon Holt December 31 2005 Infinity IRS Beta loudspeaker Stereophile Source Interlink Media Retrieved January 18 2011 Levitin D J February 1996 The Audio Interview M amp K s Ken Kreisel Audio 80 28 34 Phillips Wes March 1997 Audio Odyssey Ken Kreisel of M amp K Stereophile Retrieved April 24 2010 KEN KREISEL HISTORIC TIMELINE Kreiselsound com Kreisel Retrieved December 31 2018 About Sensurround The 70mm Newsletter In70mm com January 26 2010 Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved April 24 2010 a b Mastering for vinyl vs mastering for CD Record Producer com Masterclass Professional Learning April 12 2007 Archived from the original on August 21 2007 Retrieved April 24 2010 a b Krukowski Damon June 17 2015 Drop the Bass A Case Against Subwoofers pitchfork com Pitchfork Retrieved December 31 2018 a b Brewster Bill Broughton Frank The Record Players DJ Revolutionaries Black Cat p 64 a b Lawrence Tim Beyond the Hustle Seventies Social Dancing Discotheque Culture and the Emergence of the Contemporary Club Dancer In Ballroom Boogie Shimmy Sham Shake A Social and Popular Dance Reader ed Julie Malnig University of Illinois Press 2009 p 204 a b Papenburg Jens Gerrit Enhanced Bass in Sound as Popular Culture A Research Companion edited by Jens Gerrit Papenburg Holger Schulze MIT Press 2016 p 210 Salkind Micah Do You Remember House Chicago s Queer of Color Undergrounds Oxford University Press 2018 pp 60 61 a b Fink Robert Below 100 Hz Towards a Musicology of Bass Culture In The Relentless Pursuit of Tone Timbre in Popular Music eds Fink Robert Latour Melinda Wallmark Zachary Oxford University Press 2018 pp 104 105 Henriques Julian 2011 Sonic Bodies Reggae Sound Systems Performance Techniques and Ways of Knowing London Bloomsbury ISBN 9781441149343 Burrell Ian July 11 2012 One love Traditional sound 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