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some questions on tweet horns
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<blockquote data-quote="squeak9798" data-source="post: 636925" data-attributes="member: 555320"><p>Yup. I am assuming your deck has a 13 band EQ built in, and that's why you keep asking?</p><p></p><p></p><p>Well, you could measure out the dimensions under your dash. I believe the ID webpage has some dimensions on it. And like audiolife mentioned, you can go with mini-horns if needed.</p><p></p><p></p><p>He was saying if you didn't have a lot of money to spend, you could go with the Audiocontrol EQX since it has a built in 2-way xover (you'd still need to highpass the mids on the lowend, though) and a dual 13-band EQ. Only problem with Audiocontrol xovers is that they don't use pots, they use resistor packs for the crossovers. Which means you basically need to already know what xover points you want, that way you can build the resistor pack (it'd be a pain in the ass to constantly try new xover points, because for each new xover point you'd have to build a new resistor pack and plug it in. Not the most user friendly product under the sun). That's why he said 800hz would be good....though I'm not sure if the CD-e1's can go that low, and I don't think mini-horns can go that low if you wanted to go with those.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="squeak9798, post: 636925, member: 555320"] Yup. I am assuming your deck has a 13 band EQ built in, and that's why you keep asking? Well, you could measure out the dimensions under your dash. I believe the ID webpage has some dimensions on it. And like audiolife mentioned, you can go with mini-horns if needed. He was saying if you didn't have a lot of money to spend, you could go with the Audiocontrol EQX since it has a built in 2-way xover (you'd still need to highpass the mids on the lowend, though) and a dual 13-band EQ. Only problem with Audiocontrol xovers is that they don't use pots, they use resistor packs for the crossovers. Which means you basically need to already know what xover points you want, that way you can build the resistor pack (it'd be a pain in the ass to constantly try new xover points, because for each new xover point you'd have to build a new resistor pack and plug it in. Not the most user friendly product under the sun). That's why he said 800hz would be good....though I'm not sure if the CD-e1's can go that low, and I don't think mini-horns can go that low if you wanted to go with those. [/QUOTE]
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some questions on tweet horns
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