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Have you ever seen a truck with a blow though put more subs inside the cab?
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<blockquote data-quote="Buck" data-source="post: 8886973" data-attributes="member: 591582"><p>So, I used to slow songs and use audacity, so there's programs you can use to actually look at the frequencies of parts of songs. You can you a basic db meter too, possibly, definitely with tones. Maybe also you can EQ frequencies already and see which EQ bandwidth makes it louder or whatever. Not guessing but actually knowing what the range is you want to increase is maybe underrated, but there's several different ways to narrow it down to more surely know. Idk how much you know or not, so just generalizing my experiences.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buck, post: 8886973, member: 591582"] So, I used to slow songs and use audacity, so there's programs you can use to actually look at the frequencies of parts of songs. You can you a basic db meter too, possibly, definitely with tones. Maybe also you can EQ frequencies already and see which EQ bandwidth makes it louder or whatever. Not guessing but actually knowing what the range is you want to increase is maybe underrated, but there's several different ways to narrow it down to more surely know. Idk how much you know or not, so just generalizing my experiences. [/QUOTE]
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Have you ever seen a truck with a blow though put more subs inside the cab?
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