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speaker rms power handling after bandpassed
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<blockquote data-quote="duztin" data-source="post: 8589284" data-attributes="member: 673521"><p>i was never (not a single time) arguing that midbass wouldnt be better in the front. You are right, this has been covered and i have agreed to the above. I have already installed my 6x9 composites in the front (which have very ****** midbass response below 125hz). I am not going to buy a separate set up 6x9's to replace those. All i am doing now is filling the empty gap in my rear access doors (tacoma truck) and also utilize the empty 2 channels in my 4 channel amp feeding my fronts. My system would sound *good enough* without any rear speakers whatsoever, but I have decided that I want to fill in the 80hz-125hz range a little better so i bought rear 6.5 speakers designed to fill in that frequency response better. All i was asking, and all i wanted to know was if speakers could continuously handle more wattage than the manufacturers RMS wattage spec if i was using a shorter frequency range than what the speaker was designed to output. Marc and audio answered my specific question. Audio gave a more detailed explanation which makes sense. Who knows if the manufacturer ran the spec based on heat or the hardware specifically (spider holding the voicecoil might tear/etc). So ya.. i like that answer and it makes perfect sense. So apparently my original question can only be answered based on how the manufacturer of the speaker tested the product to spec the rms wattage.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="duztin, post: 8589284, member: 673521"] i was never (not a single time) arguing that midbass wouldnt be better in the front. You are right, this has been covered and i have agreed to the above. I have already installed my 6x9 composites in the front (which have very ****** midbass response below 125hz). I am not going to buy a separate set up 6x9's to replace those. All i am doing now is filling the empty gap in my rear access doors (tacoma truck) and also utilize the empty 2 channels in my 4 channel amp feeding my fronts. My system would sound *good enough* without any rear speakers whatsoever, but I have decided that I want to fill in the 80hz-125hz range a little better so i bought rear 6.5 speakers designed to fill in that frequency response better. All i was asking, and all i wanted to know was if speakers could continuously handle more wattage than the manufacturers RMS wattage spec if i was using a shorter frequency range than what the speaker was designed to output. Marc and audio answered my specific question. Audio gave a more detailed explanation which makes sense. Who knows if the manufacturer ran the spec based on heat or the hardware specifically (spider holding the voicecoil might tear/etc). So ya.. i like that answer and it makes perfect sense. So apparently my original question can only be answered based on how the manufacturer of the speaker tested the product to spec the rms wattage. [/QUOTE]
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speaker rms power handling after bandpassed
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