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Subwoofers
overexcursion symptoms
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<blockquote data-quote="vario" data-source="post: 4590322" data-attributes="member: 583966"><p>I'm feeding my beater audiobahn 500 watts rms, its rated for around that much and its a high end older model so its not like the modern crappy audiobahn, but its still my beater. Its in a 1.2 cube sealed box.</p><p></p><p>I played around with the gains since I bought a new head unit with more voltage and it seems to make a whacking noise when I run a bass test. The excursion is rather ridiculous.</p><p></p><p>Another question is how do I know the polarity of the sub's terminals? Prior to resetting the gains this afternoon I set the head unit's subwoofer option to REV, meaning it reverses the signal and it seemed to be in better phase with the music. Just to clarify, I set the gains as described above with it on NORM. Is it possible that the terminal's are incorrect on the sub? Is there a way to check this?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="vario, post: 4590322, member: 583966"] I'm feeding my beater audiobahn 500 watts rms, its rated for around that much and its a high end older model so its not like the modern crappy audiobahn, but its still my beater. Its in a 1.2 cube sealed box. I played around with the gains since I bought a new head unit with more voltage and it seems to make a whacking noise when I run a bass test. The excursion is rather ridiculous. Another question is how do I know the polarity of the sub's terminals? Prior to resetting the gains this afternoon I set the head unit's subwoofer option to REV, meaning it reverses the signal and it seemed to be in better phase with the music. Just to clarify, I set the gains as described above with it on NORM. Is it possible that the terminal's are incorrect on the sub? Is there a way to check this? [/QUOTE]
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