This is how I place my speakers. Woofer below. Just for near field listening.
I don't really hear the bass if I am not in this glass partition room. But if sit in front of my pc, then the bass hits real hard.
So I guess sound is really subjective. My r1280dbs probably cost me only $110 purchased a year ago. My t5 purchase yesterday from endlesspassion. paid only 40+ out ofnpocket after getting massive discounts from other sources So it's like $150+ and i enjoy how it sounds. That's all that matter isn't it haha
Love your setup. Nice and neat!
If I may make you understand a bit more, it is not that sound is subjective. The thing is, our hearing is limited to a certain range. We can only hear from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz; and it gets lesser with age or ear damage from very loud noises and so on.
So the thing is, many speakers, are already capable of doing the 20 Hz to 20 kHz (with the help of a subwoofer) already for years and years. This includes the instruments needed to drive the said speakers. It is why a very old tube amp will be able to do the same as a modern amp.
As many have pointed out, amps are just like PC power supplies. They have a rated RMS power as well as allowing for max peak power during sudden loud noises that a speaker needs more power to drive the cones for those particular moments. So it is exactly like how a PC power supply does it in that usually, a GPU will stay around a certain load but there are some scenes with many particle effect explosions that the GPU may need sudden transient spikes of power that a power supply needs to be able to supply the GPU with at any moment.
So when it comes to old soundcards, it is fine to use an old soundcard that can only handle up to 24 bits at 44100 Hz on your Windows Sound settings as mentioned, if you divide it by 2, it means, you are getting the recording audio signal of 22.05 kHz that is higher than the human hearing already as is which is, as a reminder, 20 Hz to 20 kHz. So at most, 24 bits at 48,000 Hz is more than enough for your sound output. You will not be missing any details at all except for any deficiencies in your speaker reproduction of the audio and/or if you have a subwoofer to help handle the missing sub bass region of the audio which is typically around the 20 Hz to 120 Hz frequency range.
So, the reason why you are not able to hear the bass at certain positions of your room or outside of the room is because of bass traps in a room, position of the subwoofer (that is why there is such a thing as a subwoofer crawl) and mostly because of how big the woofer is. Depending on the room size, you will need a certain subwoofer cone size in order to be powerful enough to fill and pressurize the room. The smaller the woofer and the weaker the RMS power of the subwoofer, the more, the subwoofer will not be able to pressurize a certain room size. That is why you mentioned only being able to hear the bass when you are directly in front of the PC.
So as mentioned, I hope you understand why your experience is like so and so. It has nothing to do with preference. It is just that many audio components have already been able to produce the entire human hearing range of audio as well as the speaker not being powerful enough to fill the room and can only pressurize in your near field. And not because sound is subjective.
Hope you find it as interesting to learn as I did upon seeing your setup and hearing your explanation from your experience which seems to be in line with the scientifically objective knowledge of why you get such an experience out of your speaker setup.
Hope you enjoy your purchase. Maybe you'll consider getting a proper 20Hz to 150Hz subwoofer to really experience what a sub bass is which is more of feeling this pressure that can make you scared (as horror movies know this bass frequency range makes your heart feel unnerving because of the improper rhythm to your heart making you feel like something is not right) or hit you hard (with a thump) if you had ever experienced a C4 explosion in real life like I had. Because like the C4 explosion and a subwoofer, it is all about sound pressure and moving the air to create that pressure that you can feel as opposed to hear in that 10-30Hz region that you are missing.
But again, take your time. There's no need to rush in improving a sound system when you may end up buying something underwhelming instead because of a tight budget now instead of saving up the budget over a longer period enough to buy a good one. $40 is an extremely good deal to experience what missing a certain bass region is all about. So you can maybe consider saving up to get a proper one in the future since $40 is really a small drop in the bucket that it wouldn't really affect the budget of getting a proper one.