The point of my question was that the electric basses throughout all the albums go the most low of all (Keb' Mo' comes close though);
Yesterday I was feeling my woofers for this, and in my perception this was even under 32Hz or so, and I don't see any electric bass go that low, unless de-tuned (strings more loose than normal). However, that would not create a nicely felt frequency as I did yesterday and merly would go in the direction of Crazy Horse (Neil Yong &) if you know what I mean.
But maybe I'm wrong and special E++ (blabla) string basses exist ...
If I'm not wrong, something is not right.
But let's say that possibly I am able to squeeze out more "bass" than officially recognized. So, of course such a bass will not produce a nice sine, and from that base view anything can happen for lower frequencies. I mean, an upright bass is easily able to produce something like maybe 15Hz by means of putting a lot of resin on the bow and let it dance over the string. But *that* would be on/off sound and thus is not fair. But what I try to refer to is that per resonance, lower frequencies can emerge easily I think but the question is whether that ever could be reproduced nicely. So now I'm obviously referring to my speakers again and how they are tuned.
Maybe the mere point - or how I came to it in the first place : what I just described
here is also all over related to the bass behaviour of the system, and which I did *not* describe in there because I am not sure yet how it can exist yet. So, I can easily feel sub-low frequencies with good behaviour (!) which I can't hear because so low (or not loud enough). This wasn't so before. This is a new experience from only about "last day" and I felt it all over in that Dread Zeppelin bass ...
Do notice : In that link I said that my NOS1 is now flat on the floor so it can easily be false (LF).
Peter