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heard same speakers as mine on high end kenwood, sounded much better
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<blockquote data-quote="T3mpest" data-source="post: 2538690" data-attributes="member: 560148"><p>Ok, first things first. The difference you heard was NOT the amps, nor was it inherently the hu. It may have been the EQ and crossove settings available on the hu, but it wasn't a inherent SQ difference, just the EQ/crossover/ta. If his speakers were in different locations then that will make a huge difference too! Bridging an amp won't affect SQ, it'll simply create more power, hence it'll get louder.</p><p></p><p>Now with the "dangerous" advice you've been getting dismissed I'll move on to the rest of your questions. First off, remember it's the speaker that decided what impedence the amps see's, the the other way around. If you have a 4 ohm speaker, and an amp a stable at .5 ohms, you can't get the power at .5 ohms out of the amp, simply because the speakers are incapable of showing that little amount of resistance.</p><p></p><p>Nismo 14, I believe, is referring to the fact speakers can often handle more power when they are bandpassed or high passed vs when they run full range. This is because as we limit the lower frequencies, less power is being sent to the speaker and less excursion is required for high output. Tweets dont' move as far as sub for the same volume level, despite their miniscule size and low amounts of power, why, becuase they dont' have to play 20hz!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="T3mpest, post: 2538690, member: 560148"] Ok, first things first. The difference you heard was NOT the amps, nor was it inherently the hu. It may have been the EQ and crossove settings available on the hu, but it wasn't a inherent SQ difference, just the EQ/crossover/ta. If his speakers were in different locations then that will make a huge difference too! Bridging an amp won't affect SQ, it'll simply create more power, hence it'll get louder. Now with the "dangerous" advice you've been getting dismissed I'll move on to the rest of your questions. First off, remember it's the speaker that decided what impedence the amps see's, the the other way around. If you have a 4 ohm speaker, and an amp a stable at .5 ohms, you can't get the power at .5 ohms out of the amp, simply because the speakers are incapable of showing that little amount of resistance. Nismo 14, I believe, is referring to the fact speakers can often handle more power when they are bandpassed or high passed vs when they run full range. This is because as we limit the lower frequencies, less power is being sent to the speaker and less excursion is required for high output. Tweets dont' move as far as sub for the same volume level, despite their miniscule size and low amounts of power, why, becuase they dont' have to play 20hz! [/QUOTE]
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heard same speakers as mine on high end kenwood, sounded much better
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