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Rear speakrs sounding muffled
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<blockquote data-quote="Buck" data-source="post: 8861804" data-attributes="member: 591582"><p>I prefer my mids and highs to produce sound from in front of me, like a musical stage. You can put a designed midbass woofer in the rear factory location, where it doesn’t play very high Hz, that way it’s not producing super loud vocals, but is more like a “filler” sound and can provide a ton of midbass (relatively). Having a lot of midbass in the speakers back there means if you ever have a sub or do now, then you can make the sub play lower by tuning it lower, and the midbasses close the gap between the bass and higher notes from the front door speakers. </p><p></p><p>Also, in my experience, any speakers that are coaxial from factory and have more than 1 tweeter are usually not the best speakers, not saying they don’t work and don’t sound good, just saying the best speakers I’ve ever heard have 1 woofer and 1 tweeter.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buck, post: 8861804, member: 591582"] I prefer my mids and highs to produce sound from in front of me, like a musical stage. You can put a designed midbass woofer in the rear factory location, where it doesn’t play very high Hz, that way it’s not producing super loud vocals, but is more like a “filler” sound and can provide a ton of midbass (relatively). Having a lot of midbass in the speakers back there means if you ever have a sub or do now, then you can make the sub play lower by tuning it lower, and the midbasses close the gap between the bass and higher notes from the front door speakers. Also, in my experience, any speakers that are coaxial from factory and have more than 1 tweeter are usually not the best speakers, not saying they don’t work and don’t sound good, just saying the best speakers I’ve ever heard have 1 woofer and 1 tweeter. [/QUOTE]
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