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Adjusting bright sound?
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<blockquote data-quote="Buck" data-source="post: 8727345" data-attributes="member: 591582"><p>Because they have to adjust the EQ themselves. EQ'ing is fairly straightforward, once you have the concept of which frequencies sound like what. It can take a little bit to understand. But you won't hurt anything at low volume. Crossovers just keep your woofers and/or tweeters from playing too high or too low. High pass filter means when you set it at XX frequency, it'll only play higher than that, it depends on the DB/octave slope or fall off. Low pass filters keep audio from playing above the set frequency. </p><p></p><p>What you're having issues with is too much of certain high frequencies that you still need to play. So that's where an EQ comes in. So with something like a 7 band EQ, you could have frequencies like 60 hz, 120hz, 250 hz, 600 hz, 1000 hz, 3000 hz, 10000 hz. What your tweeters are playing are usually around 3000 hz and up. So look for something around that frequency range.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buck, post: 8727345, member: 591582"] Because they have to adjust the EQ themselves. EQ'ing is fairly straightforward, once you have the concept of which frequencies sound like what. It can take a little bit to understand. But you won't hurt anything at low volume. Crossovers just keep your woofers and/or tweeters from playing too high or too low. High pass filter means when you set it at XX frequency, it'll only play higher than that, it depends on the DB/octave slope or fall off. Low pass filters keep audio from playing above the set frequency. What you're having issues with is too much of certain high frequencies that you still need to play. So that's where an EQ comes in. So with something like a 7 band EQ, you could have frequencies like 60 hz, 120hz, 250 hz, 600 hz, 1000 hz, 3000 hz, 10000 hz. What your tweeters are playing are usually around 3000 hz and up. So look for something around that frequency range. [/QUOTE]
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Adjusting bright sound?
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