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Should I go 3-way?
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<blockquote data-quote="audiolife" data-source="post: 960154" data-attributes="member: 541383"><p>i did all this crap 10 years ago (dont mean this to sound like a smarty pants but i also had some VERY good teachers first hand without a doubt at least the best i could have within a 300 mile radious for sure). no im by no means a god but its far better to not jump from the frying pan into the fire. people love to play over sophisticated with their systems its not really needed. guaranteed if you knew me as an individual you wouldnt think what i said was an attack on you in any sorts. the basics of it can be googled (superposition). too me its important that you learn it/read it yourself as to me ranting about it suggests im playing preacher. im not thick headed enough to say there isnt more than 1 way to skin a cat so in YOUR learning you can pick it apart for yourself and take what you want from it and apply it to how you do things. its not a major read (maybe 30 minutes tops) but there is alot of info. over the basics of it it basically talks about how waves work with and against eachother. how this applies to your 3 way set up is unless the 3 things i brought up but didnt name are done you will have a hard time getting the system set up THAT good. EVEN if you did there are still problems with frequancy roll off at the crossover points then incoherant lines of dispersion of the speakers themselves (probably bad wording there but im tired as fook and will make sense when you apply what you already know to what it will be that you are reading.) its basically the reason behind using horns in a way but is transfered over as it still applies to sound waves. btw i hate typing and i hate teaching/telling people what it is to exactly do it makes me feel like im insulting ones right to do their own thing which is what im not really trying to do. im just trying to let people know what it is that they should consider dealing with before they make some of the same mistakes i already made.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="audiolife, post: 960154, member: 541383"] i did all this crap 10 years ago (dont mean this to sound like a smarty pants but i also had some VERY good teachers first hand without a doubt at least the best i could have within a 300 mile radious for sure). no im by no means a god but its far better to not jump from the frying pan into the fire. people love to play over sophisticated with their systems its not really needed. guaranteed if you knew me as an individual you wouldnt think what i said was an attack on you in any sorts. the basics of it can be googled (superposition). too me its important that you learn it/read it yourself as to me ranting about it suggests im playing preacher. im not thick headed enough to say there isnt more than 1 way to skin a cat so in YOUR learning you can pick it apart for yourself and take what you want from it and apply it to how you do things. its not a major read (maybe 30 minutes tops) but there is alot of info. over the basics of it it basically talks about how waves work with and against eachother. how this applies to your 3 way set up is unless the 3 things i brought up but didnt name are done you will have a hard time getting the system set up THAT good. EVEN if you did there are still problems with frequancy roll off at the crossover points then incoherant lines of dispersion of the speakers themselves (probably bad wording there but im tired as fook and will make sense when you apply what you already know to what it will be that you are reading.) its basically the reason behind using horns in a way but is transfered over as it still applies to sound waves. btw i hate typing and i hate teaching/telling people what it is to exactly do it makes me feel like im insulting ones right to do their own thing which is what im not really trying to do. im just trying to let people know what it is that they should consider dealing with before they make some of the same mistakes i already made. [/QUOTE]
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