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<blockquote data-quote="MiniVanMan" data-source="post: 2901214" data-attributes="member: 573252"><p>A passive crossover does exactly that. You need to figure out the frequency you want to cut. Then find a crossover calculator somewhere online to calculate the value for the components you'll need.</p><p></p><p>For a 6 db per ocatve cut, you would use just one capacitor. If you wanted a steeper slope you would use a capacitor in series and an inductor in parallel.</p><p></p><p>I'd say a just a simple 6 db slope cut at about 100-120 hz will probably do what you're looking for.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MiniVanMan, post: 2901214, member: 573252"] A passive crossover does exactly that. You need to figure out the frequency you want to cut. Then find a crossover calculator somewhere online to calculate the value for the components you'll need. For a 6 db per ocatve cut, you would use just one capacitor. If you wanted a steeper slope you would use a capacitor in series and an inductor in parallel. I'd say a just a simple 6 db slope cut at about 100-120 hz will probably do what you're looking for. [/QUOTE]
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