Re: Need installer contact and speaker supplier
powertorque said:
I find the bass too boomy now. What should I do? Tweaking the preamp settings did't seem to help. It does reduce the bass but it's not getting tighter. There seem to be a lot of lingering low freq, which cause the boominess I guess. I noticed the preamp setting for the crossover is about 60Hz. Wud changing that to a lower freq, say 40-50Hz help? The gain knob is at about 75%.
Re your suggestion to crossover the front speakers to the sub at 60Hz, won't that put more bass to the sub, creating even more boominess? I was thinking that I can some achieve a tighter bass from the front speakers, letting the sub provide that non-directional deeper bass.
Crossing your sub at a lower freq - say 50hz will help as it reduces the amt of audible bass. From practical experience, I find that I can reduce a bit of boom if I lower the crossover point, and increase the gain a little to compensate.
Wat kind of 'tight' bass you talking about? The snap of a snare drum, the resonating pluck of a guitar (played loudly), the initial kick of a kickdrum? That should come from your 6.5 inch components. I was screwing around with my mids today to try to go for this... I switched off my sub, and forced the components to snap and kick. At the end of the session... hahah the mid could 'kick' the material of my jeans.
The idea is to let your components play as much bass as possible - loud, and without distortion. "Distortion" is the key word here as once the mid range is overstressed, everything breaks up. You have that distortion ceiling. In a normal setup without any high pass, the component plays full range. We go loud, and try to give a bit of bass boost, but usually find that there is a limit where distortion comes in rather quickly. That's because its trying to reproduce power sapping freqs like 20Hz, 30Hz.
In your case, you may want to up the bass settings in your HU/ bass freq in yr preamp, switch off the subwoofer and try to get component to kick. When the components are kicking, slowly add more and more subwoofer bass to complement and extend the low end.
I am thinking you have two concerns when you try to get kicking bass out of your front... you will hit the ceiling where the component is trying to kick, but starts to distort.
1. Your DLS speakers may be power hungry.
2. Yr genesis profile may not have that abundance of juice.
Therefore, if you'll need cut power wastage.. the components should be made to play low freqs of 20, 30, 40 hz, so high pass it away. You'll find that the distortion is now gone, and you can continue to push the envelope further. BTW, dun forget to try a variety of songs , not just your eagles coz just when you think you have bass that is just right, you put in another song and find that you overdid it (that's what happened to me).
Bass of 60Hz and below is barely audible. If the sub plays plenty of this, you will have much deep rumbling, not boominess. The boomy ones are 100Hz, 120Hz and for most car audio cabins, they have a resonant spike of 200hz, which likes to muddy up the vocals and detract from clarity.
So... if your sub plays the lows, and the boomy 100hz is managed by your components (which is smaller, and more subdued), you will be able to control better.
BTW, I not expert leh, you call me that and I'll have to curb my babbling of ICE nonsense liao. Still learning everyday and pulling my hair out slowly bit by bit. You never get it right the first, or even second time. Can you imagine wat kind of trials you wanna make if you add in the new factors that you may add individual time alignment (hey! bass alignment and summation!) and throw in 31 band EQ with more parametric EQ, and then try to juggle and balance gains of HU, processor/preamp, and the amp? Hahahah