is -4 a magic number?you cant from the HU
just adjust the 20 hz to -4 or so if you are worried about bottoming out
My question here is:
If the component set you buy comes with passive crossovers, wouldn't the people that make the component set, set the crossover points that best suit the component set? Or it more of a personal preference thing, where most people have tastes different than the creators of the component set?
Thanks man, much appreciated, thats exactly the info I needed!i would start w/
sub 80hz -24db/oct
mid low 80hz -24db/oct
mid high 3.2khz -24db/oct
highs 3.2khz -24/db/oct
I recommend keeping both sides equal w/ xover points and slopes, but I attenuate when needed to have both sides balanced.
to get a balance, try playing the tweets only, then balance left and right to where they sound equally loud on either side. I do that by balancing far right and left and adjusting the levels on the crossover or gains, if you have independent gains.
then do the same for mids.
after that, you balance your mids and tweets (attenuating or boosting left and right together if any adjustment is needed) and repeat for your sub.
do all that after getting the phase right. http://www.zshare.net/audio/5006010928145cf2/
check phase w/ mids and tweets playing separately (turn mids off when checking tweets, and vice versa). it'll be easier.
I don't understand what safety has to do with it, really. Sure, you can run a tweeter down way too low and push it to it's mechanical excursion limit fry it, but passives are designed by the manufacturer to make the sound transition the most optimal after testing them out. Some do it consistantly different than others...Dyn uses 6 db/Oct slopes and I've seen Rainbow use 18db/oct.9 times out of 10 the passive crossover points are a "safe" crossover point. Meaning with the realtively low slopes of the passives ( usually 6db-12db ) your components are going to be safe from idiot consumer abuse. Doesn't mean they are the best or ideal. Just means they are a little safer for the everyday average joe blow. Going active with a passive set, using the passive crossover is a good starting point. But with an active setup, most of the time you have much steeper slopes to control things a little better //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif