![]() ![]() If anything his gain is probably a little low. Lunchmoney, Time to do a little more research over on DIYMA about using the multimeter method to set gain, you're a little off on what you're saying. I promise you you won't get anywhere near that level, unless you enjoy rattles. now turn the gain on your sub amp up until you like how it blends with the rest of your system, making sure you don't exceed the "max" level that you determined with the multimeter approach. then put the bass setting on your head unit back up to 0. Turn the gain all the way down on your sub amp. So you've got your sub gain set at it's absolute max, which is WAY too high. you should think of it as the "maximum gain level that shouldn't be exceeded, such that I don't have any clipping". you shouldn't think of that setting as "where your amp gain should be". which is a total BULLSHIT way of setting your gains, don't get me started, but let's say for argument's sake that it's a valid method. You set your sub gain using the "multimeter-with-low-test-tone" method. that bass setting on your head unit is probably around 100 hz, which is definitely affecting you midbass ouput that bass control on your head unit doesn't just control the sub, it's also killing your low MID-BASS, which is where all your rock kick drums are. as a result, you've got your bass set on -6, which is WAY too low. if your sub is low-passed at 15, that's much too low, and you would only hear the very lowest bass. your sub should be low-passed at around 80-100. You said "high passed at 90, low-passed at 15". At what frequency is the sub low-passed at? ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
December 2022
Categories |