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you dont need to break it in. play it, it will loosen up on its own.
subs dont blow because of breakin processes, they blow because of misuse (power beyond thermal/mechanical limits, etc etc)
So aq reccomends breaking in the subs they make because they aren't well built probably?if the sub builder used quality stuff to glue the spider and surround down you shouldn't have a problem playing it straight out the box. but there's nothing wrong with allowing the suspension time to loosen up by playing at low volumes for 10-20hours
thats not totaly true...i think you're missing the point.
you can take your time, feed a 1krms sub 200watts for a month, and let it break in that way
you can put a 1k 20hz tone on it for 15 seconds, and let it break it in that way.
no matter what you do, the sub will BE THE SAME after it is broken in. You wont have any gain from breaking a sub in over time or in 10 seconds, it will perform exactly the same either way.
Exactly.You don't need to have a break in procedure for subs. Period. You put the sub in a box and play it. It will loosen up on it's own. If you choose to do otherwise, your wasting your own time.
Bass boost and pro should not be in the same sentence.took about 3 weeks for my l7 15 to break in maybe 2 but i noticed after about 3 and i never took it easy lol i but i had gain bass boost etc tuned by a pro
did u do that with ur hdc3s?I drive around and play 25 hz or so. Make sure the sub is a few volume knob clicks away from bottoming out.
The 18 that I have still isn't broken in and i drove around for about a week playing test tones. I don't understand why the spiders on it are different from the 15's that my teammate has. It's way too stiff for a copper coil.did u do that with ur hdc3s?