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Please help me plan a nice front stage.
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<blockquote data-quote="trumpet" data-source="post: 7553001" data-attributes="member: 628688"><p>Primer, or spray paint as well, does not block moisture. Ever seen a body panel rust out when someone tried to do their own body work? Use a few coats of rubberized undercoating spray on MDF speaker rings.</p><p></p><p></p><p>You're entirely wrong on this subject, so please stop giving bad advice. Peel'n'Seal is for roofs, not vehicles. Compare it to real sound deadener tiles and notice the two main differences: 1) it's asphalt based, not butyl based 2) it has no metal bonded to it. The metal isn't there just to look shiny.</p><p></p><p>As for sound deadening not improving the sound of your door's speakers, all you need to do is perform a search and you'll find countless evidence to the contrary.</p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.sounddeadenershowdown.com" target="_blank">Sound Deadener Showdown - Your Source for Sound Deadening Products and Information</a></p><p></p><p>Regarding your advice about power ratings on speakers, the thing to remember is music is dynamic and your speakers are only momentarily going to receive your amp's maximum power output. This is why people can run 200 watts per channel on 50 watt RMS speakers and not instantly blow them up. Obviously this requires correct tuning and careful gain matching and also not listening to compressed music at high volume.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="trumpet, post: 7553001, member: 628688"] Primer, or spray paint as well, does not block moisture. Ever seen a body panel rust out when someone tried to do their own body work? Use a few coats of rubberized undercoating spray on MDF speaker rings. You're entirely wrong on this subject, so please stop giving bad advice. Peel'n'Seal is for roofs, not vehicles. Compare it to real sound deadener tiles and notice the two main differences: 1) it's asphalt based, not butyl based 2) it has no metal bonded to it. The metal isn't there just to look shiny. As for sound deadening not improving the sound of your door's speakers, all you need to do is perform a search and you'll find countless evidence to the contrary. [URL="http://www.sounddeadenershowdown.com"]Sound Deadener Showdown - Your Source for Sound Deadening Products and Information[/URL] Regarding your advice about power ratings on speakers, the thing to remember is music is dynamic and your speakers are only momentarily going to receive your amp's maximum power output. This is why people can run 200 watts per channel on 50 watt RMS speakers and not instantly blow them up. Obviously this requires correct tuning and careful gain matching and also not listening to compressed music at high volume. [/QUOTE]
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Please help me plan a nice front stage.
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