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<blockquote data-quote="Why So Cereal?" data-source="post: 7573959" data-attributes="member: 626047"><p>when ppl say headroom, they usually mean having more power than you actually need, thus reducing distortion.</p><p></p><p>as far as the high pass filter, it dictates how low your comps will play i.e. how much bass/midbass you want them to reproduce. setting it depends on your listening preference. for example, if i never really crank my system, I can run a lower xover point (50-80hz) because the mids still wont be working all that hard; if you like it loud, youre generally gonna want a higher crossover point (100-125hz) to keep the mids from over extending when you crank it up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Why So Cereal?, post: 7573959, member: 626047"] when ppl say headroom, they usually mean having more power than you actually need, thus reducing distortion. as far as the high pass filter, it dictates how low your comps will play i.e. how much bass/midbass you want them to reproduce. setting it depends on your listening preference. for example, if i never really crank my system, I can run a lower xover point (50-80hz) because the mids still wont be working all that hard; if you like it loud, youre generally gonna want a higher crossover point (100-125hz) to keep the mids from over extending when you crank it up. [/QUOTE]
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