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Help With Sub Sound Range...
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<blockquote data-quote="T3mpest" data-source="post: 6615823" data-attributes="member: 560148"><p>Most guitar and drums sounds come from the upper bass region, midbass, which isnt' usually handled by a sub. The lower part of the bass drums and the lower strings on an acoustic are all subwoofer range though. My car produces very realistic drums and guitars with no sub, for reference. Just missing the two things I mentioned. Anyway if your not getting those frequencies right now it's your speakers not your sub. Are your speakers mounted to a baffle, or just to the stock door baffle. Adding an MDF baffle can help alot. Also try switching the phase of your speakers, switch your pos/neg leads on one end of yoru amp, it may help. It may sound alot worse though too, if so just switch it back. The difference will be drastic and apparent, one way or another.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="T3mpest, post: 6615823, member: 560148"] Most guitar and drums sounds come from the upper bass region, midbass, which isnt' usually handled by a sub. The lower part of the bass drums and the lower strings on an acoustic are all subwoofer range though. My car produces very realistic drums and guitars with no sub, for reference. Just missing the two things I mentioned. Anyway if your not getting those frequencies right now it's your speakers not your sub. Are your speakers mounted to a baffle, or just to the stock door baffle. Adding an MDF baffle can help alot. Also try switching the phase of your speakers, switch your pos/neg leads on one end of yoru amp, it may help. It may sound alot worse though too, if so just switch it back. The difference will be drastic and apparent, one way or another. [/QUOTE]
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Help With Sub Sound Range...
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