Menu
Forum
General Car Audio
Subwoofers
Speakers
Amplifiers
Head Units
Car Audio Build Logs
Wiring, Electrical and Installation
Enclosure Design & Construction
Car Audio Classifieds
Home Audio
Off-topic Discussion
The Lounge
What's new
Search forums
Gallery
New media
New comments
Search media
Members
Registered members
Current visitors
Classifieds Member Feedback
SHOP
Shop Head Units
Shop Amplifiers
Shop Speakers
Shop Subwoofers
Shop eBay Car Audio
Log in / Register
Forum
Search
Search titles and first posts only
Search titles only
Search titles and first posts only
Search titles only
Log in / Join
What’s new
Search
Search titles and first posts only
Search titles only
Search titles and first posts only
Search titles only
General Car Audio
Subwoofers
Speakers
Amplifiers
Head Units
Car Audio Build Logs
Wiring, Electrical and Installation
Enclosure Design & Construction
Car Audio Classifieds
Home Audio
Off-topic Discussion
The Lounge
What's new
Search forums
Menu
Reply to thread
Forum
Car Audio Discussion
Head Units
Alpine cda 9887 crossover/parametric settings?
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="yischrax" data-source="post: 6741958" data-attributes="member: 555698"><p>No if you have both of them playing to 80 Hz on a 18 DB slope it means the subs will be 18db less at 160hz and that the. Mids will be 18db quieter at 40 Hz you are getting full spectrum don't worry about that by adjusting the slope to 6 it means that one will over lap the other meaning say the sub was x over at 6db it would only be 6db quieter than what the mid is playing at 160hz does that make sense having your equal flat even though you chose fz's to have them at means it isn't doing anything seems like with the x over beeing at 0 that it is not being used ether. I would think it would be better to use one x over or the other not both ether the one on the deck or the one on the amp not both your over eqing then. Your slopes could be steeper than you realise lets say the deck is already crossing your frontstage off at 80hz and you set the amp to do so at 100hz so when they both meet rather than being at a 18 DB slope it would already be 6db down at 75 Hz From the amp and would be dropped down a hair from the one set at 80hz that much more. Does this make sense to you? More or less its over processing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yischrax, post: 6741958, member: 555698"] No if you have both of them playing to 80 Hz on a 18 DB slope it means the subs will be 18db less at 160hz and that the. Mids will be 18db quieter at 40 Hz you are getting full spectrum don't worry about that by adjusting the slope to 6 it means that one will over lap the other meaning say the sub was x over at 6db it would only be 6db quieter than what the mid is playing at 160hz does that make sense having your equal flat even though you chose fz's to have them at means it isn't doing anything seems like with the x over beeing at 0 that it is not being used ether. I would think it would be better to use one x over or the other not both ether the one on the deck or the one on the amp not both your over eqing then. Your slopes could be steeper than you realise lets say the deck is already crossing your frontstage off at 80hz and you set the amp to do so at 100hz so when they both meet rather than being at a 18 DB slope it would already be 6db down at 75 Hz From the amp and would be dropped down a hair from the one set at 80hz that much more. Does this make sense to you? More or less its over processing. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forum
Car Audio Discussion
Head Units
Alpine cda 9887 crossover/parametric settings?
Top
Menu
What's new
Forum list