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<blockquote data-quote="T3mpest" data-source="post: 6840869" data-attributes="member: 560148"><p>If you want to use the rears as midbass that's fine. It may help make your subbass to midbass transition at little better. I'd run a lpf at 200hz or so. Depends how steep the slope is. Play just the rears and you want to filter out the rears so you don't get much of the vocal region coming through. You'll get some no matter what. Try listening to just a voice on the radio and listen and a make sure it still sounds like it's just coming mostly from up front. You'll still get reinforment near 80hz where the sub comes in, so it'll help.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="T3mpest, post: 6840869, member: 560148"] If you want to use the rears as midbass that's fine. It may help make your subbass to midbass transition at little better. I'd run a lpf at 200hz or so. Depends how steep the slope is. Play just the rears and you want to filter out the rears so you don't get much of the vocal region coming through. You'll get some no matter what. Try listening to just a voice on the radio and listen and a make sure it still sounds like it's just coming mostly from up front. You'll still get reinforment near 80hz where the sub comes in, so it'll help. [/QUOTE]
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