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Damage speakers by gain?
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<blockquote data-quote="squeak9798" data-source="post: 2066177" data-attributes="member: 555320"><p>The reason I suggested the DMM method is due to his level of experience. For the novice, I feel it it much better to atleast give them a target starting point for gain level setting, since this takes much of the "guess work" out of it, which they may not really have the experience level to properly judge yet. Once they have the gain set using the DMM method, they can listen to it at that level and decide whether or not the gain setting needs minor <em>tweaking</em> from there.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="squeak9798, post: 2066177, member: 555320"] The reason I suggested the DMM method is due to his level of experience. For the novice, I feel it it much better to atleast give them a target starting point for gain level setting, since this takes much of the "guess work" out of it, which they may not really have the experience level to properly judge yet. Once they have the gain set using the DMM method, they can listen to it at that level and decide whether or not the gain setting needs minor [I]tweaking[/I] from there. [/QUOTE]
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Damage speakers by gain?
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