couple of audio questions.
#1
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BOOM goes the dynamite!
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From: in a van down by the rive
couple of audio questions.
i have a couple of questions. my friend just bought a new system (2 10" kicker comps 8ohms, volfenhag 500watt amp) and i hooked it up in my car (because he doesn't want it in his truck (94 ford explorer) yet) and there's more bass to it than what i have (2 10" pioneer subs with a koiiler 600watt amp) and i'm just curious as to why. is it just that the kickers are better? also, i bridged his but not mine (the guy he bought from told me to bridge it). and if bridging is the difference, why is that? what does bridging actually do?
also, is a crossover what i would need to get rid of the distortion of my regular speakers? everytime heavy bass hits, i get mad distortion in my 4 regular speakers, but once the bass is gone, they're fine. that'd be what a crossover fixes, right? (and how does that work anyway?)
thanks. :goodjob:
also, is a crossover what i would need to get rid of the distortion of my regular speakers? everytime heavy bass hits, i get mad distortion in my 4 regular speakers, but once the bass is gone, they're fine. that'd be what a crossover fixes, right? (and how does that work anyway?)
thanks. :goodjob:
#2
Originally posted by flipped cracker
also, is a crossover what i would need to get rid of the distortion of my regular speakers? everytime heavy bass hits, i get mad distortion in my 4 regular speakers, but once the bass is gone, they're fine. that'd be what a crossover fixes, right? (and how does that work anyway?)
also, is a crossover what i would need to get rid of the distortion of my regular speakers? everytime heavy bass hits, i get mad distortion in my 4 regular speakers, but once the bass is gone, they're fine. that'd be what a crossover fixes, right? (and how does that work anyway?)
#4
Originally posted by flipped cracker
well, the distortion is in the regular speakers, which don't have an amp hooked to them.
well, the distortion is in the regular speakers, which don't have an amp hooked to them.
#5
Thread Starter
BOOM goes the dynamite!
Joined: Mar 2003
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From: in a van down by the rive
Originally posted by ImportCarTuner
Oh... the interior speakers aren't amped... hmmm... maybe the speakers are blown? :dunno:
Oh... the interior speakers aren't amped... hmmm... maybe the speakers are blown? :dunno:
#6
Seems like perhaps the sound pressure from the subwoofer is causing the 4 interior paper coned speakers to distort a little.. it seems a little far fetched but it could happen. Turn the bass down and see if the distortion goes away
#7
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BOOM goes the dynamite!
Joined: Mar 2003
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From: in a van down by the rive
Originally posted by moofoo
Seems like perhaps the sound pressure from the subwoofer is causing the 4 interior paper coned speakers to distort a little.. it seems a little far fetched but it could happen. Turn the bass down and see if the distortion goes away
Seems like perhaps the sound pressure from the subwoofer is causing the 4 interior paper coned speakers to distort a little.. it seems a little far fetched but it could happen. Turn the bass down and see if the distortion goes away
#9
I think its a combo of your deck sending out a distorted signal and also your speakers hitting thier limit. A crossover will help with this but it will be hard to implement without an amp on the highs. I would get an amp on the highs to help them keep with will all the bass and you can use its crossover to cut out some of the bass so they wont bottom out. Are you interor speakers stock?
As far as your subs its probably that the kickers may be a bit more efficient and this makes up for the power difference or it could be his am is jsut really putting out more than yours. It could also be a function of the box ie size type ect. Usallly bridging an amp that is say 150 x 2 will be 300 x 1 channel usally same total power but distributed different. Some amps will put out more bridged but a lot depends on the ohm load. Most people bridge sub amps. You should do this if your subs are in a box like a bandpass box or where the subs share the same air space.
As far as your subs its probably that the kickers may be a bit more efficient and this makes up for the power difference or it could be his am is jsut really putting out more than yours. It could also be a function of the box ie size type ect. Usallly bridging an amp that is say 150 x 2 will be 300 x 1 channel usally same total power but distributed different. Some amps will put out more bridged but a lot depends on the ohm load. Most people bridge sub amps. You should do this if your subs are in a box like a bandpass box or where the subs share the same air space.
#10
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BOOM goes the dynamite!
Joined: Mar 2003
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From: in a van down by the rive
the interior speakers aren't stock. i'll just look into getting an amp for them. i did turn the bass down on the head unit and that helped a little. and i change some treble settings there too and that helped (but it's still there).
i'll have to look into bridging my amp. i actually stuck his subs in my box (i guess i should have mentioned that) so there's no difference in the box at all. it's a sealed box (not bandpass). i also think it has to do with the kickers being better. then just felt better (they're a little heavier and it feels like they're made better (the cone isn't made out of plastic like the pioneers)).
thanks for all the help guys. :goodjob:
i'll have to look into bridging my amp. i actually stuck his subs in my box (i guess i should have mentioned that) so there's no difference in the box at all. it's a sealed box (not bandpass). i also think it has to do with the kickers being better. then just felt better (they're a little heavier and it feels like they're made better (the cone isn't made out of plastic like the pioneers)).
thanks for all the help guys. :goodjob: