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Do I like my CDT HD62?
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<blockquote data-quote="Notwerk" data-source="post: 2444739" data-attributes="member: 553427"><p>This is very, very unlikely. I'll say once again, a speaker won't "come alive" because of a given amount of wattage, unless you have no idea how to set your gains. For normal listening levels, 50 watts would do. For safety's sake, I'd give them their RMS and call it a day. Of course, none of this matters because he already posted that <strong>he has 200w on tap</strong>. So, it absolutly isn't a power question.</p><p></p><p>I'd say to look at speaker phase and crossover adjustment. If neither of these helps, maybe the speaker just isn't for him. That's the danger of buying speakers you haven't heard in person: Sometimes you end up with something that just doesn't appeal to your ear.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Notwerk, post: 2444739, member: 553427"] This is very, very unlikely. I'll say once again, a speaker won't "come alive" because of a given amount of wattage, unless you have no idea how to set your gains. For normal listening levels, 50 watts would do. For safety's sake, I'd give them their RMS and call it a day. Of course, none of this matters because he already posted that [B]he has 200w on tap[/B]. So, it absolutly isn't a power question. I'd say to look at speaker phase and crossover adjustment. If neither of these helps, maybe the speaker just isn't for him. That's the danger of buying speakers you haven't heard in person: Sometimes you end up with something that just doesn't appeal to your ear. [/QUOTE]
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Do I like my CDT HD62?
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