Okay, after several attempts to make this better...this I the best I could do. My plan is to purchase a BFD and take care of the spike at 40Hz. Hopefully, it does this for me without problems. I tried my best to get rid of the spike at 100Hz. However, when I removed it by adjusting the speaker distances or phase, it would just appear somewhere else. I thought I was clever by getting it to peak at 125Hz, since my Pioneer receiver has a dB adjustment on its EQ at that freq. BUT...when I raised the lull that was at 125Hz, it raised all the other freq the same amount. In other words it just shfted my graph up by what I increased the 125Hz by. Anyway, I was thinking, maybe just maybe the BFD could help with this. Even though my x/o is set at 80Hz, it seems as if playing with the subs phase or distance still affected the 100Hz signal. SO..I would conclude that some of this signal is being played by the sub, even though the cutoff point is set at 80 (guessing its not a straight drop off point but more or less attenuates down to 0dB eventually). And by that assumption, maybe the BFD connected to my sub could help out there too

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Here are a few more questions for the VERY helpful bruce all mighty

1. any recommmedations on a cheap USB soundcard and where to get it?
2. I did all my cals at first in my "movie mode". So, all of the 80-160Hz signals were sent to my center channel. Thats how I did the initial graph. The one in this post I set to "stereo" so only my mains were on? I was going to redo the center graph (while set to "movie" mode) to try to match its graph with my mains. Good idea? or am I a crazy insane perfectionist?
3. cant think of 3 ...THANKS FOR THE HELP!!!