I spoke with tech support at Boston Acoustics, I’ll try to summarize [Larry, see bottom of message]:
Typically a Dolby Digital receiver has an LFE (Low Frequency Effects) output with a fixed low pass filter (LPF), typically at 80 Hz per THX spec.
The Micro90pvII subwoofer in the BA 9000 II has a fixed LPF (fourth order –24dB/octave slope @ 150Hz), and was engineered to “blend” with the satellites. The Micro 90XII has a built-in high pass filter (HPF) around 150Hz, so it will not try to reproduce bass. Hence, there was not a need for a variable crossover, since it was designed to sound as good as possible out of the box.
Now that Dolby Digital receivers have bass management for fine tuning, if you set the bass management to "SMALL", most receivers utilize a 80-90 HPF for the "SMALL" configuration (“LARGE” configuration provides full range audio).
So if you connected your satellites with speaker wire, and your sub with a line level connection, you would have a gap in between the 90-150Hz band. It may sound OK in the room, but it may sound a little thin.
The Micro90pvII sub was engineered to handle both line level and speaker level connections at the same time, without overloading the input stage.
The line level input “From LFE out” is for the discrete sixth bass channel (“.1”) in the 5.1 setup, which is crossed over to the low freq. by the receiver’s bass management. The line level input “From LFE out” bypasses the crossover circuitry in the subwoofer.
The line level input “From SUB Out” is for an older ProLogic receiver that outputs a full range output that needs to be filtered by the sub. This line level input and the speaker level connections are sent to the 150Hz fourth-order LPF.
With respect to receivers utilizing variable crossover, THX specifies the crossover at 80Hz, which typically works the best. If you set the crossover at 150Hz, it may make the sub a bit directional depending on room placement.
[Larry, what's the crossover (XOVER) freq. setting in the 1050? You might want to try reducing the setting down toward 80Hz (mine's set at 150Hz and sounds fine, but room dynamics may be a big part). Maybe that will reduce the bass coming from the LFE a bit on the "heavy bass scenes". See p.22 of the Outlaw manual.
Also, I looked over your room diagram, and it looks like your sub is WAY to the left. You might try moving the sub away from the edge of the wall a bit to reduce the bass output. Hope this helps
]
Cheers, UW.