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Need help conceptualizing door speaker placement
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<blockquote data-quote="Gunk" data-source="post: 8684850" data-attributes="member: 677707"><p>I found this <a href="https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004G8W0D2/?tag=caraudiocom-20" target="_blank"><strong><u>Beyma </u></strong></a><strong><u>Pro8Mi.</u></strong> The details warn about playing to low of frequencies through it. It recommends to crossover the low end at 200hz. Would a 15" sub play up past 200hz to fill this in or would I have some gaps in my sound spectrum in the 150-200hz area?</p><p></p><p>Here's the quote...</p><p></p><ul> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">It's important to emphasize that although this loudspeaker seems physically intended for woofer or subwoofer; this speaker is not designed to reproduce that frequency range. Meaning we could break it quite easily if we intend to give it such use.</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">On the contrary, if we use it to reproduce the frequencies for which it is designed, this speaker can generate very high levels with great high quality playback. But always as part of a system in which there also woofers and/or subwoofers to complement it and reproduce the lower frequencies where the midrange loudspeakers, with it's special design, can't.</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul">The cutoff frequency recommended for these speakers not only have to take into account the frequency range, but also the impedance curve of each one of them.<strong> Based on these data the recommended cuts would be the following: Minimum lower cutoff frequency (High Pass): 200Hz. Maximum upper cutoff frequency (Low Pass): 4-5 kHz</strong></li> </ul></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Gunk, post: 8684850, member: 677707"] I found this [URL='https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004G8W0D2/?tag=caraudiocom-20'][B][U]Beyma [/U][/B][/URL][B][U]Pro8Mi.[/U][/B] The details warn about playing to low of frequencies through it. It recommends to crossover the low end at 200hz. Would a 15" sub play up past 200hz to fill this in or would I have some gaps in my sound spectrum in the 150-200hz area? Here's the quote... [LIST] [*]It's important to emphasize that although this loudspeaker seems physically intended for woofer or subwoofer; this speaker is not designed to reproduce that frequency range. Meaning we could break it quite easily if we intend to give it such use. [*]On the contrary, if we use it to reproduce the frequencies for which it is designed, this speaker can generate very high levels with great high quality playback. But always as part of a system in which there also woofers and/or subwoofers to complement it and reproduce the lower frequencies where the midrange loudspeakers, with it's special design, can't. [*]The cutoff frequency recommended for these speakers not only have to take into account the frequency range, but also the impedance curve of each one of them.[B] Based on these data the recommended cuts would be the following: Minimum lower cutoff frequency (High Pass): 200Hz. Maximum upper cutoff frequency (Low Pass): 4-5 kHz[/B] [/LIST] [/QUOTE]
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Need help conceptualizing door speaker placement
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