yeah like i have my gain set with a dmm so its all clean and my bass boost is off but i was just wondering if the bass knob was a gain setting or a bass boost setting. and now i understand that it is a bass boost setting. so what if i set me gains low at like 40 volts and use my bass boost knob to rise it back to the exact output it was at before. what it still be a clean signal or would it be clippin?Yes, the kicker knobs are 'bass boost'.
Think of it like this:
Loudness is a string that you are holding tight between to hands.
When you turn up the volume...you move both hands up equally.
When you turn the bass boost up, your hands stay in place...but someone else comes by, pinches the string and raises it at a point along the line.
I don't use bass boost.
what most people (including myself) did was just set the bass boost at max with ur gain set at what you set it with your dmm.
Thats what i did and now i just keep the bass boost down unless im listening to rap or something.
That's maximun distortion and phasing
Your thinking of acoustic phasing. Analog EQ's induce electrical phasing and harmonics into the music signal. Analog eq's work by manipulating the audio; spliting it into bands with crossovers points and phasing. All analog eq's induce electrical phasing and harmonics. When the amount of eq boost is subtle the phasing noise is not, usually, noticable, but hard boosts cause noticalbe phasing, even with the highest quality eq. With simple low quality eq's it is even more apparent.phasing has nothing to do with that what so ever. all that does is sync multipal subs together so there is no cancellation or damage to woofers if there in a box without divider
ok thanks for the enlightment that deff was sumthing new to me im not in to EQ's so much but great infoYour thinking of acoustic phasing. Analog EQ's induce electrical phasing and harmonics into the music signal. Analog eq's work by manipulating the audio; spliting it into bands with crossovers points and phasing. All analog eq's induce electrical phasing and harmonics. When the amount of eq boost is subtle the phasing noise is not, usually, noticable, but hard boosts cause noticalbe phasing, even with the highest quality eq. With simple low quality eq's it is even more apparent.
The electric phasing is heard as a muddiness and subtle distortion (not a hard clipping) around the crossover points that reduces clarity. Narrow phasing is heard only near the crossover points, while severe phasing can be heard across much further up and down the frequency band from the crossover point. Harmonic noise is heard only at a doubling of the frequencies.