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Anybody notice Pioneer HU's LPF slope cant be turned off
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<blockquote data-quote="suleman36" data-source="post: 2443054" data-attributes="member: 563964"><p>Subs I tend to cross over more steeply, and use midbass or mids to roll off to the subs.</p><p></p><p>with mids and tweeters, the shallower the slopes, typically the smoother the transitions and better the SQ turns out, but the downside is that the speakers get hellishly more picky about beaming and directionality, their power handling drops significantly, and there are a few other issues. A steeper 12-18dB slope for mids/tweeters tends to make the install a lot easier, lets you throw more power at the speakers, and really works out nearly as well.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="suleman36, post: 2443054, member: 563964"] Subs I tend to cross over more steeply, and use midbass or mids to roll off to the subs. with mids and tweeters, the shallower the slopes, typically the smoother the transitions and better the SQ turns out, but the downside is that the speakers get hellishly more picky about beaming and directionality, their power handling drops significantly, and there are a few other issues. A steeper 12-18dB slope for mids/tweeters tends to make the install a lot easier, lets you throw more power at the speakers, and really works out nearly as well. [/QUOTE]
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Anybody notice Pioneer HU's LPF slope cant be turned off
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