I remember seeing these in endless adverts and in more than a few IASCA cars back in the day.
Often considered, never bought.
Since they predated consumer-grade DSP by a fair bit, how were these analog wonder-devices "analyzing" the music, then adding "missing" bass back in, in real-time?
Given the processing power it takes a for noise-canceling headphones to do the obverse, it seems to me that it would have all been techno-hype for a circuit that simply EQs the bass appreciably.
Anyone in the know?
Often considered, never bought.
Since they predated consumer-grade DSP by a fair bit, how were these analog wonder-devices "analyzing" the music, then adding "missing" bass back in, in real-time?
Given the processing power it takes a for noise-canceling headphones to do the obverse, it seems to me that it would have all been techno-hype for a circuit that simply EQs the bass appreciably.
Anyone in the know?
