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Frequency response, octave question
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<blockquote data-quote="22mountaineer" data-source="post: 8450213" data-attributes="member: 572186"><p>Going to post my question that I ask in the sticky, figure no one looks at it. I'm referring to the passive vs active sticky, post 1 has a pic of freq curve with each octave level.</p><p></p><p>Re: Active vs. Passive: An attempt by me to explain</p><p></p><p>Found this in a search and I'm going to pull this from the dead due to the picture in post <a href="http:////forums/usertag.php?do=list&amp;action=hash&amp;hash=1" target="_blank">#1</a> . So when raising the octave, are you making it to where the speakers initially respond at a higher frequency? Do you change this for the speaker specs in general or do you change it for what you hear? What's the difference in what you are going to hear from a sharper curve (higher octave)? If any.</p><p></p><p>It's been awhile guys! Started a family, just bought a suburban and I need to replace all of the speakers so I'm refreshing my memory. Thanks</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="22mountaineer, post: 8450213, member: 572186"] Going to post my question that I ask in the sticky, figure no one looks at it. I'm referring to the passive vs active sticky, post 1 has a pic of freq curve with each octave level. Re: Active vs. Passive: An attempt by me to explain Found this in a search and I'm going to pull this from the dead due to the picture in post [URL="http:////forums/usertag.php?do=list&action=hash&hash=1"]#1[/URL] . So when raising the octave, are you making it to where the speakers initially respond at a higher frequency? Do you change this for the speaker specs in general or do you change it for what you hear? What's the difference in what you are going to hear from a sharper curve (higher octave)? If any. It's been awhile guys! Started a family, just bought a suburban and I need to replace all of the speakers so I'm refreshing my memory. Thanks [/QUOTE]
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