Bag
End
M-6 Time-Align monitors
Infrasub-12 PRO subwoofer
When Bag End sent me a three-piece system featuring their new M-6
studio monitors and Infrasub-12 PRO subwoofers, I lugged the heavy boxes over
to WMBR Radio (where I used to DJ and engineer live recordings) for my colleagues
there to use and test. I had little interest in auditioning these speakers
myself. But a couple months later, the engineers at WMBR submitted their review,
and I became immediately intrigued with the Bag End system when I read words
like “stunning,” “remarkable,” and “blew away everything else” in the writeup.
So I lugged the heavy boxes back to my studio and gave the system a fair shake
myself. In the process, I realized how useful a subwoofer can be in “turning”
a room, even if high-quality, full range speakers are already being used.
Let's start off with the review from WMBR, and I'll butt in again afterwords
to share my own opinions and revelations. (M-6 each $630 MSRP; Infrasub-12
PRO $2080; www.bagend.com) -AH
We've been big fans of Bag End's line of home audio gear for some time at
WMBR studios, so we were naturally excited at the opportunity to check out
products in the manufacturer's studio line. Our three-piece demo system consisted
of an Infrasub-12 PRO subwoofer and a pair of M-6 Time-Align nearfield monitors
as satellites. The sub is an active unit, employing an amp capable of driving
its 12” driver with 400 Watts RMS. The nearfields are passive. We happened
to have a Gemini power amp available, and it performed admirable with the
M-6's. While we would have liked to test a few different amps, we had little
trouble discerning the characteristics of the system with the Gemini.
Setup of the system was very straightforward. The few frequency-shaping and
volume controls are all located on the subwoofer; like most passive speakers,
the nearfields don't have any settings themselves. The sub's crossover rolls
off the lows starting at 80 Hz on the satellites. The Infrasub-12 PRO is designed
to be flat down to 8 Hz, but if your source music has too much noise in the
sub-bass (e.g., if the music was produced on a system unable to reproduce
low frequencies, and therefore, too much sub-bass noise was unknowingly left
in the mix), you can switch in a cutoff at 20 Hz. Whether you have the cutoff
set at 8 or 20 Hz, given the amount of power required to deliver high volumes
at such low frequencies, it would still be possible to overload the sub's
400 W amp. But the designers at Bag End came up with a unique approach to
managing signals that have too much low end to reproduce without distortion
or damage. The typical method is to employ a limiter or compressor to reduce
the amplitude of the signal below the fixed crossover frequency. This can
result in pumping or sudden “holes” in the bass whenever the limiter or compressor
engages. The Infrasub-12 PRO, on the other hand, utilizes a Dynamic Filter
circuit that moves the cutoff frequency of a high-pass switch) upwards to
prevent overload. In other words, if a signal with too much low end would
require more power to reproduce than available, the Dynamic Filter will temporarily
slide the cutoff up to a frequency that will allow full-volume reproduction
of the bass content above that frequency. Bag End's reasoning for this approach
is that it sounds much more natural and musical to remove just the lowest
frequencies while keeping the rest of the bass unaffected than it is to hear
all of the bass drop in volume. A remote LED indicator (connected to the sub
via an included XLR cable) tells you when this is happening. In practice,
we rarely manged to engage the dynamic filter at our normal (but at times
loud) recording volumes.
Once we had the Bag End system set up and volume-matched, we were universally
impressed. The clarity of the satellites is about what you'd expect from a
high-quality monitoring system; all the mids and highs are very sharp and
well-defined, which helped pinpoint even the most minor problems with the
room setup or mix. Imaging capability is where the M-6's blew away everything
else we'd ever used. The trademarked Time-Align design, along with the dual-concentric
driver placement (the tweeter is actually inside the woofer) ensures that
the portion of the signal reproduced by the M-6's woofer reaches your ear
exactly in phase with the portion reproduced by its tweeter-no matter where
you're sitting within firing range of the speaker. The result is a very tangible
sense of space. This translated into a vast improvement in fine stereo-imaging
control, immediately noticeable to everyone who listened to any of the final
mixes we did on the system.
