More Speakers (Article 122 of 157)

Seismic Subs

A dozen subwoofers to rock your world
(continued)

Earthquake Super Nova MK-IV 10
($840)

Earthquake Super Nova MK-IV 10What’s in the Box?
Driver size 10 inches
Rated power not specified
Cabinet design passive radiator
Finish black or cherry veneer
Controls variable 40- to 160-Hz low-pass crossover, level, auto-on, phase switch
Ins & outs line- and speaker-level inputs and outputs
Warranty 2 years

How Big Is It?
Dimensions (WxHxD) 14 1/8 x 12 1/4 x 13 inches
Volume 1 3/8  cubic feet
Footprint 1 1/4  square feet
Weight 48 1/2  pounds

How Low Does It Go?
Bass limit32 Hz at 88 dB

How Big the Bang?
Average SPL from 32 to 62 Hz 101 dB
Maximum SPL 110 dB at 62 Hz
Dollars per dB $8.36

Earthquake Super Nova MK-IV 10 backWhat About Setup?
The controls are flexible enough to get a smooth blend with most systems, but it isn’t easy. The measured crossover range was narrow, and the controls don’t play nice together — changes in the crossover affected the output level by as much as 6 dB.

How Does It Sound?
A little uneven — for example, I heard some “blooming” of certain notes on acoustic-bass tracks. And since the sub couldn’t reproduce the bottom octave and a half (10 to 32 Hz), it didn’t provide the envelopment and sense of the room shaking you get when subs go that low. 

The Bottom Line
The Super Nova is best suited for smaller home theater setups where the deepest of deep bass isn’t essential.

Manufacturer Earthquake Sound, www.earthquakesound.com, 510-732-1000

PDF: In the Lab


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