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SQL setup in a Ford Bronco (I've searched)
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<blockquote data-quote="audioholic" data-source="post: 4557257" data-attributes="member: 549629"><p>Dedicated midbass means these speakers will only be expected to play midbass. You will retain your mids for the midrange freqs. Generally speaking, midbass speakers run about 50-250hz, give or take a bit on the top and bottom depending on the situation and personal taste. This means running an active filter system of some sort... either utilizing the filters on your deck and/or amplifiers, or buying a dedicated sound processor to add to your signal chain.</p><p>Midbass should be played in stereo, not mono. So to answer your second question, best bet will likely be run two pairs at 3ohms each pair, off an A/B amplifier, sending the proper Left and Right channels to each pair. Remember, these will be playing at least to 250hz, bass by that frequency is highly localizable.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="audioholic, post: 4557257, member: 549629"] Dedicated midbass means these speakers will only be expected to play midbass. You will retain your mids for the midrange freqs. Generally speaking, midbass speakers run about 50-250hz, give or take a bit on the top and bottom depending on the situation and personal taste. This means running an active filter system of some sort... either utilizing the filters on your deck and/or amplifiers, or buying a dedicated sound processor to add to your signal chain. Midbass should be played in stereo, not mono. So to answer your second question, best bet will likely be run two pairs at 3ohms each pair, off an A/B amplifier, sending the proper Left and Right channels to each pair. Remember, these will be playing at least to 250hz, bass by that frequency is highly localizable. [/QUOTE]
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