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Hearing Test
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<blockquote data-quote="joetama" data-source="post: 1853457" data-attributes="member: 564641"><p>Fun fun fun....</p><p></p><p>Have done this 'test' on my 703, DM330i, and several Meyer pro speakers with a various tone generator(from a console sweep to a computer tone generator). 703 is about 21 is where it all cuts out, 330i 20 ish, PA 19 ish. By the way, this is at a constant signal level, not constant volume. This one on my stock Dell Laptop speakers I could just make out the 19kHz, left my headphones in Cincy and I'm 2 hours away from my speakers //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/frown.gif.a3531fa0534503350665a1e957861287.gif...</p><p></p><p>Anyway, my point being, you may or may not be able to hear that high, you could just not have a system that can reproduce that freq...</p><p></p><p>By the way incase you didn't figure it out the having to 'turn it up' is caused by the drop in responce of your speaker and your ears....</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="joetama, post: 1853457, member: 564641"] Fun fun fun.... Have done this 'test' on my 703, DM330i, and several Meyer pro speakers with a various tone generator(from a console sweep to a computer tone generator). 703 is about 21 is where it all cuts out, 330i 20 ish, PA 19 ish. By the way, this is at a constant signal level, not constant volume. This one on my stock Dell Laptop speakers I could just make out the 19kHz, left my headphones in Cincy and I'm 2 hours away from my speakers [IMG]//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/frown.gif.a3531fa0534503350665a1e957861287.gif[/IMG]... Anyway, my point being, you may or may not be able to hear that high, you could just not have a system that can reproduce that freq... By the way incase you didn't figure it out the having to 'turn it up' is caused by the drop in responce of your speaker and your ears.... [/QUOTE]
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