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General Car Audio
Whats the best setup for tight bass for a budget of 450$
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<blockquote data-quote="zako" data-source="post: 8031148" data-attributes="member: 629735"><p>Subwoofer alone can't play all your bass. It's important to have some good bass coming from the front speakers as well. This is important for subwoofer integration, the feeling of bass coming from up front. Most subwoofers sound sloppy or have little output above about 80Hz anyways. The issues that you describe seem to be more with the frequency response of your bass, rather than tightness. I associate tightness more with subwoofer's transient response (how dynamic and realistic it sounds with transients). The frequency response issue could come from the specifics of your cabin, box design, equalizer settings, bass boot settings, gain settings, crossover settings, etc. Only after you have tweaked all these things should you start thinking of getting another subwoofer.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="zako, post: 8031148, member: 629735"] Subwoofer alone can't play all your bass. It's important to have some good bass coming from the front speakers as well. This is important for subwoofer integration, the feeling of bass coming from up front. Most subwoofers sound sloppy or have little output above about 80Hz anyways. The issues that you describe seem to be more with the frequency response of your bass, rather than tightness. I associate tightness more with subwoofer's transient response (how dynamic and realistic it sounds with transients). The frequency response issue could come from the specifics of your cabin, box design, equalizer settings, bass boot settings, gain settings, crossover settings, etc. Only after you have tweaked all these things should you start thinking of getting another subwoofer. [/QUOTE]
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Whats the best setup for tight bass for a budget of 450$
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