Hola,
That's a good question. Well, all depends of your musical material. If you like to listen a church organ, harp or electronic music, then you might need a sub. I do not know from where my dear friend Amey01 says that a violin can produce very low subharmonics...I don't believe that a violin is capable to do that. I have friends that play violin and sometime ago we got together and play some classical music for guitar and string quartets. Not even a cello produce a very low frequency. Here is a chart where you can see the frequency response of most musical instruments:
View attachment 20942
Happy listening!
As usual, this is totally wrong when this subject comes up, and that is NOT what
Amey01 meant.
First off, who cares about this chart? It has nothing to do with anything discussed here. Everyone always posts this chart in an attempt to get a point across when it comes to bass and subwoofers, though it misses the point completely. That chart is useless. It does not tell you anything about how the fundamental bass signature of those instruments propagate into a given size room/venue. It's the same thing as measuring a subwoofer in an anechoic chamber vs measuring the same subwoofer in an actual room with room gain which may actually allow it to extend nearly 10 Hz lower than it did in the anechoic chamber.
Second, what I'm sure
Amey01 meant was that the actual acoustics of the venue in which the violin was recorded in. Yes, rooms have their own sound, and by the very nature of putting a microphone in a completely silent room/venue and recording it, you WILL hear the natural resonances of the room itself. This is what gives good quality recordings that sense of space.
It does not matter one bit if your main loudspeakers measure flat down to 20 Hz or even 15 Hz. Nine times out of ten, you are NOT going to have those speakers in the proper place for optimal bass reproduction. If you care at all about stereo separation, proper imaging and sound staging, your loudspeakers are going to be nowhere near the correct location for optimal bass reproduction. And if you do have them in that optimal bass location, then it must be a very horrible sounding stereo system.
Also, no amount of DSP corrects for room acoustics such as room modes. A DSP can not and will not move a physical peak or null of a room mode. That is solely left to the dimensions of room, the position of the speakers and more importantly, the position of the listening seat. This is why it's vital to run a separate subwoofer, preferably two subwoofers, and even more preferably, three subwoofers or more.
Properly placed, multiple subwoofers help flatten the range between the peaks and nulls of the room modes, and this is precisely why it doesn't matter one bit what the capabilities are of the main loudspeakers.
And when people say that only 10% of music has any bass information below 40 Hz it total nonsense as well. I get so tired of hearing that comment all the time. Sure, a lack luster recording on a lack luster system, this may be true, but NOT on a good system with a good recording.
In short, ALL LOUDSPEAKERS, no matter what they are, will benefit from subwoofers, period.