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Amping 3-way components ACTIVE
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<blockquote data-quote="Jeffdachef" data-source="post: 8644815" data-attributes="member: 650438"><p>I put 450 watts to a pair of 6.5s with zero issues bud. You are more likely going to run into sh*t sound when you turn it up louder and your amp is not capable of producing enough clean power and ruin your sh*t via a dirty signal that way.</p><p></p><p>Get rid of the rears and bridge a pair of channels for the midbass instead. Sound is 2.1 not 4.1, you are just fking up the whole system and soundstage overall with rears because your DSP does not have 5.1 dolby upmixing capabilities meaning all rears will do is just drag the sound stage back and literally kill your width and depth turning your setup into mediocre garbage when it could have been amazing.</p><p></p><p>You have a DSP, it doesnt matter if the tweeters run hot or not, you have unlimited tuning options to get whatever sound you want, its literally no issue here at all. Leave a crossover gap or use an RTA with the EQ to tame peaks and harshness. Sound deadening and absorbtion along with tweeter positioning are also key methods on the install.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jeffdachef, post: 8644815, member: 650438"] I put 450 watts to a pair of 6.5s with zero issues bud. You are more likely going to run into sh*t sound when you turn it up louder and your amp is not capable of producing enough clean power and ruin your sh*t via a dirty signal that way. Get rid of the rears and bridge a pair of channels for the midbass instead. Sound is 2.1 not 4.1, you are just fking up the whole system and soundstage overall with rears because your DSP does not have 5.1 dolby upmixing capabilities meaning all rears will do is just drag the sound stage back and literally kill your width and depth turning your setup into mediocre garbage when it could have been amazing. You have a DSP, it doesnt matter if the tweeters run hot or not, you have unlimited tuning options to get whatever sound you want, its literally no issue here at all. Leave a crossover gap or use an RTA with the EQ to tame peaks and harshness. Sound deadening and absorbtion along with tweeter positioning are also key methods on the install. [/QUOTE]
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