Great review my friend, you have the whole collection of subs !!! I can`t imagine how easy is to get these speakers in the US, I am about to get a supersub X but I would like to get another XXL, I`ll be waiting the series X subwoofers, good vid !
Gracias mi amigo. The sub x is quite amazing. I too want another xxl. But I’ll have to sell one or two of my other ones ☹️. Running out of room in my house 🤪
You’re welcome. If it’s a small room the 3 is more than enough. For a medium to bigger room the 4 will not disappoint. My 4 is in my living room with 12 foot ceiling and only two full walls and very wide open and my 4 still rocks in that space. Hope that helps and thanks for watching
@@HPMIKE55 if it’s good condition. I’d say about 80% of what you paid. Maybe 85%. You can list it at whatever you want but whenever I sell things I like to give people a good deal and I want my item to sell so I don’t have it forever. Hope that helps
Yes it is musical. I would say they are about the same for music. I think the sb-1000 might be a little tighter but the Forcefield can get deeper bass. Thanks for watching
There's zero difference between using a Y-splitter or a link. They are both just parallel links. Yes you half the output impedance, but that will not be an issue. Just raise your input sensitivity 3 db or so.
Splitting the signal with a Y splitter doesn’t 1/2 the signal, it duplicates it. You can split the signal a half dozen times if you want, then measure the output on each end and it’s identical. Sorry to say, but your perception that the signal is halved when using a Y splitter is just that, a perception being influenced by confirmation bias. If you were to listen to them blindly you wouldn’t be able to tell the difference. Cheers.
Perhaps your right. I’ve never measured the results. I just went by the amount of impact I feel but perhaps the splitter I used could have caused a lacking somehow. But my way i solved that issue is buying an Avm70 preamp with dual sub outputs. Thanks for watching
@@Audiolympian right on. If you ever so desire, an extremely easy way of testing signal after a split can be done with a simple voltmeter. Just check what you’re getting from the single rca, and compare it against what you’re getting on both sides after the split. Cheers.