I know you've read a lot of what's on here, but let me put 2 and 2 together for you to help understand why clustering subs is so important...yeahforbes wrote:Another thing that might sound silly but has really been a consideration for me is overall height. I'm a fan of groundstacking rather than "speakers on sticks," so a 22" DR250 on top of a 48" T48 puts the top piezo just under 70" off the ground (5' 10"). Another foot is necessary for everyone in the audience to have unimpeded line-of-sight to the HF. Thoughts? Yeah, this means separated subs instead of V-coupling center stage, but that's how I roll. I know the wave propagation theory and have found that in practice the nodes aren't a huge deal.
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P.S. Already read through everything on the main site, and probably 50+ threads on the forum, so I've heard a decent amount of the typical stuff.
The average split bass stack that you find in practice will be a stack of traditional direct radiators. These cabinets generate a fair amount of harmonic distortion above the subwoofer passband. Oftentimes, this distortion becomes associated with "loud bass" and since it is at a higher frequency, it does not suffer the same destructive interference that subbass frequencies do when subs are split. I practice, this means that even though the actual thump of the kick drum may come and go as you walk between a split stack of direct radiator subs, you'll still hear consistent volume because of the distortion.
Horn-loaded subs, on the other hand, filter out virtually ALL of that harmonic distortion. This leads to a much cleaner sound, but it also makes it much easier to identify nodes when you split your subs. It becomes clearly obvious as you walk the soundfield in a configuration like this where there is punch, and where there is none.
So, It's your rig, and your gig, and you'll do what you want, but please try doing a comparison of clustered vs. split once you have your BFM subs, and I'm confident that you'll never go back to split.
That said - For getting proper altitude for DRs, several forum members have built frames, stands, scaffold systems, and others to get the proper height and appearance for a groundstack.