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Do component speakers run parallel?
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<blockquote data-quote="audioholic" data-source="post: 8589229" data-attributes="member: 549629"><p>I've laid out multiple reasons in this thread already why using EQ adjustments to accommodate improper amplifier gain settings is a bad idea. Why would you suggest he leave his amplifier gains set wrong and then compensate by adjusting his equalizer? An equalizer is not meant to compensate for improper gain settings. If the amplifier gain was set correctly to begin with, EQ settings would only come down to environmental and listening preference differences... which is exactly what an EQ is suppose to do.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="audioholic, post: 8589229, member: 549629"] I've laid out multiple reasons in this thread already why using EQ adjustments to accommodate improper amplifier gain settings is a bad idea. Why would you suggest he leave his amplifier gains set wrong and then compensate by adjusting his equalizer? An equalizer is not meant to compensate for improper gain settings. If the amplifier gain was set correctly to begin with, EQ settings would only come down to environmental and listening preference differences... which is exactly what an EQ is suppose to do. [/QUOTE]
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Do component speakers run parallel?
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