and as far as I can understand E.Geddes, he agrees.I think you are missing one important point - the real benefit of corner placement is that you get direct and first order reflections pretty much aligned - if the SUB is out from the wall the reflections will be delayed in time, these reflections will be difficult to control using DSP.
You are right about dips, a good room correction systems would preferably only lower the peaks and not try to boost the dips, however with the added gain from the corner you have a lot of headroom to shape the response by "cutting away".
Having studied this a bit, I'm now leaning towards a Sub (actually Woofer) system in a closed box with low box Q (as low as 0.5) using a driver with low MMS, Rms, Le and high BxL. So not a sub unit in classic sense
As mentioned I have heard this work with the Steinway Lyngdorf system, so I'm very eager to challenge the conventional wisdom you are referring to
He starts with one bass in the corner and then adds the others spaced along the walls.
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