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Sub Killing My Speakers??
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<blockquote data-quote="helotaxi" data-source="post: 420160" data-attributes="member: 550915"><p>The pressure created by the subs doing their job will play hell with your rear deck speakers unless you do something about it. At best it will make them sound horrible by causing the cone to move when it isn't supposed to, and at worst it can tear surrounds and cones. You have two options. 1) get rid of the rear speakers and let the bass funnel into the cabin through the now vacant speaker cutouts or 2) put the rear speakers in some kind of enclosure. Those foam baffles will not help much. They are designed more to keep door speakers from getting wet. You need some kind of rigid enclosure to keep the pressure from the subs from getting to the rear of the speakers. You can build them out of MDF or fiberglass or whatever you can think of.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="helotaxi, post: 420160, member: 550915"] The pressure created by the subs doing their job will play hell with your rear deck speakers unless you do something about it. At best it will make them sound horrible by causing the cone to move when it isn't supposed to, and at worst it can tear surrounds and cones. You have two options. 1) get rid of the rear speakers and let the bass funnel into the cabin through the now vacant speaker cutouts or 2) put the rear speakers in some kind of enclosure. Those foam baffles will not help much. They are designed more to keep door speakers from getting wet. You need some kind of rigid enclosure to keep the pressure from the subs from getting to the rear of the speakers. You can build them out of MDF or fiberglass or whatever you can think of. [/QUOTE]
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