Raw - Can you recommend a good floor sub for a small room to go with my monitors?
Well, I was always a fan of keeping the sub the same brand as your monitors. This is because they are usually designed to be used as a matched set. Crossover frequencies will be matched up perfectly and performance will be optimized. But then, that’s just one opinion. And you know what opinions are like.
I talked about speaker size in my original post of this thread. Playback volume should be considered as well.
Setting the proper level of bass is not that hard. Some of those powered subs have a level knob that works on the plus-minus theory. Meaning that the center most setting (or 5 on a 10 scale,) produces a flat or true level. Turning the knob clockwise (above 5) will boost more bass and turning counter-clockwise will cut or attenuate bass.
If you are anal like me and want to be sure that the sub is matched to the room, you can use an SPL meter and test tones. An SPL meter is a small hand held box that measures volume. You can get them at electronic stores and you can usually mount them on a camera tripod.
You simply play test tones one at a time (most recording software can produce these for you,) at different frequencies and measure the volume of each one at the mix position. The goal is to get all or most of the frequencies to play at the same volume.
Step the frequencies down through the range that your monitors play and then through what the sub plays, measuring as you go. The lower the frequency, the closer the test intervals should be. Example; in the mid-range, you can test about every 1000Hz or so, in the low-mid every 100Hz, and in the bass range you should check every 10Hz or so. If you find that your sub is louder or quieter than the monitors, simply adjust until matched. If you have one problem frequency that is out of line with the others, you can fix that with targeted room treatment.
Hope this helps.
Raw