Monitor sub bass in a home studio setup

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HOW TO…

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Look at the bass performance in your studio space and position bass traps in the corners. You can use a room mode analyser such as amroc (below) to assess your room’s acoustics
The SubPac is an innovative harness-based sub bass monitoring option

>If you want to actually hear and feel sub bass frequencies then you’ll need devices capable of reproducing those frequencies. When evaluating monitors we often focus on the mid range articulation, bass punch and top end delivery, with sub bass coming way down the list of importance. However, even nearfield monitors can produce useful amounts of very low frequencies, particularly if they use ported designs. If you’re not sure what yours are capable of, load up an oscillator plugin in your DAW and gradually sweep it downwards from about 80Hz. The level eventually decreases until you can’t hear it at all. If you’re lucky this will be around 40Hz, but it could be much higher.

Armed with this information you can then decide how to extend your sub bass monitoring. For example, you could simply get bigger monitors.

However, these take up more space and need a good sized room to be practical. A simpler and more affordable option is a sub bass unit, which you use in conjunction with your nearfields. This is a bit like a home cinema configuration. When setting this up you’ll need to decide on a crossover frequency with your nearfields, and this can take some fine-tuning. What’s more, you’ll also need a method to switch the sub bass on and off whilst the nearfields continue to work. Some sub bass units include a handy footswitch, but it can also be useful listening to the sub bass on its own. If your switching can achieve this, even better.

One sub bass monitoring option that’s gained considerable traction is a contact device called SubPac. Capable of delivering frequencies from 1Hz-200Hz this harness-based device is not only pretty silent, but can be used in conjunction with speakers and headphones, so is arguably the most flexible option.

Although headphones can be hard to mix on, they do often provide much lower frequency response than nearfields, so can form a very handy reference device to help you hear the lowest frequencies in your mix.

Next, look at the bass performance of your space. Low bass frequencies carry a lot of energy and controlling and dissipating that energy can be tricky. The combination

of transmission through walls, ceiling and particularly the floor (which monitors will usually be connected to) combined with the build up and cancellation of reflections within your space can spell double trouble. Enter the dimensions of your room into a room mode analyser such as amroc (https://amcoustics.com/). This will tell you which frequencies could cause peaks and troughs and hence unrepresentative loud and quiet frequencies. Its 3D di

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