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General Car Audio
Crossovers and Mids
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<blockquote data-quote="SRim23" data-source="post: 4753983" data-attributes="member: 568830"><p>generally speaking your mids will cover anywhere from 65hz - 2.5 khz give or take. some people like to cross their mids a little higher. ive got mine crossed at 100hz. are you using the passive crossovers with your comp set? if so ur speakers should be playing correct frequencies, being that they are new (i think ) they will start to play the lower notes a little better when they break in. if your tweet is too overpowering check your passive crossover (assuming you got em) and there should be a tweeter attenuation 0db, -3db, -6db. mess with that until your tweet isnt so overpowering.</p><p></p><p>when i got my first set of comps i was high crazy. most of my eq settings i had set way too high on my 4khz, 8khz, 12khz settings. once i got my gains set correctly, crossover on the amp set correctly, i get the best sound when i have my eq set to flat.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SRim23, post: 4753983, member: 568830"] generally speaking your mids will cover anywhere from 65hz - 2.5 khz give or take. some people like to cross their mids a little higher. ive got mine crossed at 100hz. are you using the passive crossovers with your comp set? if so ur speakers should be playing correct frequencies, being that they are new (i think ) they will start to play the lower notes a little better when they break in. if your tweet is too overpowering check your passive crossover (assuming you got em) and there should be a tweeter attenuation 0db, -3db, -6db. mess with that until your tweet isnt so overpowering. when i got my first set of comps i was high crazy. most of my eq settings i had set way too high on my 4khz, 8khz, 12khz settings. once i got my gains set correctly, crossover on the amp set correctly, i get the best sound when i have my eq set to flat. [/QUOTE]
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