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DIY & Tutorials
DIY For Audio
Frequency response
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<blockquote data-quote="d0dja" data-source="post: 790495" data-attributes="member: 2244"><p>Yeah, it's a prob with specs -- esp things like sensitivity, which is more or less an average over the useful range.</p><p></p><p>It may be worth checking how much damping you are using -- it's easy to over-do it and make the mids lose punch. </p><p></p><p>What you can try is to apply some equalisation from your music player app... Foobar has a 24 band graphic EQ, and a parametric one as well. At least this can give you a feel for whether some attenuation would help.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="d0dja, post: 790495, member: 2244"] Yeah, it's a prob with specs -- esp things like sensitivity, which is more or less an average over the useful range. It may be worth checking how much damping you are using -- it's easy to over-do it and make the mids lose punch. What you can try is to apply some equalisation from your music player app... Foobar has a 24 band graphic EQ, and a parametric one as well. At least this can give you a feel for whether some attenuation would help. [/QUOTE]
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DIY & Tutorials
DIY For Audio
Frequency response
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