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Strange frequency behavior of new installation
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<blockquote data-quote="cartraveller" data-source="post: 8711047" data-attributes="member: 680513"><p>Thanks for clarifying. Now I understand it: it works with a calibration file and restores the original signal. Changing the wiring is indeed not a good idea because there might be phase differences between the channels (I missed that possibility). So the best thing I can do is live with the current signal, don't use the cross over settings in the DSP amplifier, but accept the cross over settings as implemtned in the head unit and try to flatten the signal to some extend with the DSP capability of the amplifier. If that would not be enough, I have to buy such a Fix86 to restore the signal before feeding it to the DSP amplifier. Thanks for the help.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cartraveller, post: 8711047, member: 680513"] Thanks for clarifying. Now I understand it: it works with a calibration file and restores the original signal. Changing the wiring is indeed not a good idea because there might be phase differences between the channels (I missed that possibility). So the best thing I can do is live with the current signal, don't use the cross over settings in the DSP amplifier, but accept the cross over settings as implemtned in the head unit and try to flatten the signal to some extend with the DSP capability of the amplifier. If that would not be enough, I have to buy such a Fix86 to restore the signal before feeding it to the DSP amplifier. Thanks for the help. [/QUOTE]
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