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Will this harm too much...?
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<blockquote data-quote="Umbra" data-source="post: 8305581" data-attributes="member: 658055"><p>Did you get IP banned? Can't you just log out and view it? You could try a free web proxy as well, but if you can't get to it basically you're looking for a 40Hz test tone with a -7dB amplitude. You can use -10 to be safer, or -5 if you want to push it a bit more. Find an alternative guide to setting gains with a multimeter. If you gain knob was labeled input sensitivity it'd be marked with voltages. You could then just set it to 4V and be done with it. That'd be a safe setting, but there would probably be headroom to get more out of it, that where these tools come into play. I don't think yours is labeled that way, so I don't know what would be a safe setting.</p><p></p><p>The DSO nano is great tool. I bought one off Newegg for something like $75. It's more work than the DD-1, but it can be used outside car audio.</p><p></p><p>If you're getting an O-scope you can set the gains perfectly. Bass boost can distort the signal quickly and you'll see that with the O-scope, but If you really like using it then use it, you'll just have to turn the gain down to compensate. Your bass boost boosts the signal around 45Hz. I don't think it's only 45Hz dead-on, but it's a narrow range around that point.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Umbra, post: 8305581, member: 658055"] Did you get IP banned? Can't you just log out and view it? You could try a free web proxy as well, but if you can't get to it basically you're looking for a 40Hz test tone with a -7dB amplitude. You can use -10 to be safer, or -5 if you want to push it a bit more. Find an alternative guide to setting gains with a multimeter. If you gain knob was labeled input sensitivity it'd be marked with voltages. You could then just set it to 4V and be done with it. That'd be a safe setting, but there would probably be headroom to get more out of it, that where these tools come into play. I don't think yours is labeled that way, so I don't know what would be a safe setting. The DSO nano is great tool. I bought one off Newegg for something like $75. It's more work than the DD-1, but it can be used outside car audio. If you're getting an O-scope you can set the gains perfectly. Bass boost can distort the signal quickly and you'll see that with the O-scope, but If you really like using it then use it, you'll just have to turn the gain down to compensate. Your bass boost boosts the signal around 45Hz. I don't think it's only 45Hz dead-on, but it's a narrow range around that point. [/QUOTE]
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Will this harm too much...?
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