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need help on how to install a alpine era-g320 dsp
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<blockquote data-quote="keep_hope_alive" data-source="post: 8456660" data-attributes="member: 576029"><p>i've also ran the Alpine PXA-H701 with RUX-C701. It was much more flexible than the G320 (which I originally owned in the late 90's).</p><p></p><p>I currently run the Alpine PXA-H800 with RUX-C800. The H800 is by far the best they've made yet.</p><p></p><p>The main advantage to running Alpine processors is using their head units for control (especially volume control) and having remote displays that allow tuning (most require a laptop). Dragging out a laptop to make an adjustment is a PITA. The H800 allows for laptop tuning, but only necessary for their Imprint tuning. Manual adjustments are through the controller.</p><p></p><p>MiniDSP units are cheap and flexible. 100% laptop with no interface.</p><p></p><p>Audison Bit series offer a display for some preset recall and volume adjustment.</p><p></p><p>Rockford, PPI, etc. have processors in boxes with laptop tuning.</p><p></p><p>what processor to use depends on what your goals are. the G320 was noisy, with an audible background hiss at higher volumes (audible during track pauses). it was limited in EQ, had time alignment, but lacked any crossovers or phase or level adjustment of modern units.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="keep_hope_alive, post: 8456660, member: 576029"] i've also ran the Alpine PXA-H701 with RUX-C701. It was much more flexible than the G320 (which I originally owned in the late 90's). I currently run the Alpine PXA-H800 with RUX-C800. The H800 is by far the best they've made yet. The main advantage to running Alpine processors is using their head units for control (especially volume control) and having remote displays that allow tuning (most require a laptop). Dragging out a laptop to make an adjustment is a PITA. The H800 allows for laptop tuning, but only necessary for their Imprint tuning. Manual adjustments are through the controller. MiniDSP units are cheap and flexible. 100% laptop with no interface. Audison Bit series offer a display for some preset recall and volume adjustment. Rockford, PPI, etc. have processors in boxes with laptop tuning. what processor to use depends on what your goals are. the G320 was noisy, with an audible background hiss at higher volumes (audible during track pauses). it was limited in EQ, had time alignment, but lacked any crossovers or phase or level adjustment of modern units. [/QUOTE]
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need help on how to install a alpine era-g320 dsp
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