Sub for Olympica Nova III


Hi everyone

Thank you for all your help so far with my setup.  awesome advice and insight. 
 

I’m considering adding a sub to my setup now that the Nova IIIs are in place. 

Setup: Luxman 509Z, Nova III. Primarily for music: everything from pop to classical and jazz.
 

I thought about a Gravis III, since it’s supposedly a match musically. 
 

any suggestions welcome!

stephenwerner

the Gravis is a bad subwoofer because of how limited it is for the asking price. such a laughable price

Get this - https://www.jtrspeakers.com/jtr-captivator-rs1

Order by sending request here -  [email protected]

Thanks for all the feedback so far. Appreciate it 

 

Space is a 6.76 x 6.05m open plan lounge, kitchen and dining (double volume, sloping ceiling). Listening area within this space is approx 3.5 x 4 with sofa 2.5 -3m from the speakers. 
 

I can get a Gravis III preowned for half the price of new one here in Australia. What draws me to it is the voicing being same as Nova (one would assume) plus the ability to setup and calibrate via app. 
 

 

+1 on Rhythmic.  I have a pair and they are fantastic.   So many controls, I can mate them well to a variety of speakers.

If a sub is sufficiently controllable and goes deep enough, there is no reason you can't match them to your speakers.  +1 for the Rhythmics

I used to own Sonus Faber Olympica 3 and now own Sonus Faber Amati Traditional. I have occasionally contemplated adding a subwoofer. I got rid of mine when I upgraded from Olympica to Amati. My biggest problem with my subs (2 B&W 800 series) was turning them down enough and feathering them in. I would not concentrate that much on the specs in buying a sub... I mean... max output, watts. What they will add is a very small sliver of the audio spectrum And what is important is feathering them in correctly. 

 

I would definitely add a Sonus Faber. While other speakers I have owned in the past have been incredibly ugly. The Sonus Faber sound incredible and look great. So, that is now something I actually think about. The Sonus Faber Subwoofers are made to work with Sonus Faber Speakers. Subwoofers, unless you are trying to shake your house with an unnatural exponentially excessive bass are going to be more than you need. Most subwoofers that I hear in people’s systems are turned up too loud and are screwing up the imaging and sonic presentation. 

I would unquestionably buy the Sonus Faber.