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Subwoofers
10" vs 12"
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<blockquote data-quote="audioholic" data-source="post: 2201626" data-attributes="member: 549629"><p>There's no exact way to do it. It would of course also depend on your enclosure design for the sub(s), as that greatly affects the sub's frequency response. Byut basically I meant people run 4x6's in the dash for front speakers matched to dual 15's in the backseat and then wonder why its so bass heavy or why there's a hole in the midbass (subs wont play up high enough and front wont play low enough). If you have a solid front stage with good midbass output, run larger subs tuned lower. If you run small mids up front, dont try matching the front stage to a low-end monster like an 18" sub. *shrug*</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="audioholic, post: 2201626, member: 549629"] There's no exact way to do it. It would of course also depend on your enclosure design for the sub(s), as that greatly affects the sub's frequency response. Byut basically I meant people run 4x6's in the dash for front speakers matched to dual 15's in the backseat and then wonder why its so bass heavy or why there's a hole in the midbass (subs wont play up high enough and front wont play low enough). If you have a solid front stage with good midbass output, run larger subs tuned lower. If you run small mids up front, dont try matching the front stage to a low-end monster like an 18" sub. *shrug* [/QUOTE]
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10" vs 12"
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