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question regarding volume and hrz
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<blockquote data-quote="JimJ" data-source="post: 2086949" data-attributes="member: 555251"><p>If the subwoofer has the proper build to allow it to take advantage of the extra power, yes.</p><p></p><p>But as Loyd's graphs of the MD Sidewinder show, you can sometimes double power to a driver and encounter something called power compression - where no matter how much more power you send it, that's all the output the sub has until it thermally fails.</p><p></p><p></p><p>I'm confused by that...if you remain at a constant tone, the input signal doesn't change a bit.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JimJ, post: 2086949, member: 555251"] If the subwoofer has the proper build to allow it to take advantage of the extra power, yes. But as Loyd's graphs of the MD Sidewinder show, you can sometimes double power to a driver and encounter something called power compression - where no matter how much more power you send it, that's all the output the sub has until it thermally fails. I'm confused by that...if you remain at a constant tone, the input signal doesn't change a bit. [/QUOTE]
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