That's great how did you bypass the Amp?So I was able to put a 8 inch shallow midrange speaker for more over all sound and it's amazing! I bypassed the stock amp and it's loud enough to ride with the windows down on the road and still hear it clear!
Doesn't the midrange get significantly muffled by the seat?So I was able to put a 8 inch shallow midrange speaker for more over all sound and it's amazing! I bypassed the stock amp and it's loud enough to ride with the windows down on the road and still hear it clear!
I added a sub box with a separate amp and these give more mid bass plus cleaner vocals and the stock speakers still use the factory ampThat's great how did you bypass the Amp?
I wasn't looking for more bass but more vocals and the mid range speakers filled that space with my sub boxThere is so much wrong with the premise of the thread...
The sound that subwoofers play are very low frequency (typically considered <80Hz). At those low freq's, the wave lengths are so long, the subwoofer cones are not really emitting sound waves, so much as they compress (and decompress) the air volume inside the cabin. There are two implications to this:
1. If you want the most out of your auto-sound subs, you should always close ALL your windows and sunroofs. The enclosed air volume inside the car cabin allows the subwoofers to compress the air much more effectively. This is known as acoustic room gain. Done well, this can achieve as much as 6-9db gain in your sub-bass frequencies.
2. The very low frequencies are effectively non-directional, which is why you can pretty much put the sub drivers anywhere. Again, they only generate sound PRESSURE, not really emit sound waves that propagate linearly and directionally. The flip side of this is that the higher the frequency, the more directional the sound waves become. Typically above about 120Hz, most listeners can start to locate the source of the sound pressure. By the time you get into human voice range (> 1k Hz), human ear can very easily directionally pin-point the sound source. So... you DO NOT want to stuff your mid-range drivers under your seat. That will screw up your stereo image. In fact, if you want the optimum front soundstage, the front midranges need to be phase-coupled to the tweeters they are cross-overed with. That usually means - at the very least - they need to be in close proximity to each other. Driver placement gets far more nuanced than that, but suffice it to say... stuffing mid-range drivers under your seats are about as dumb as it gets.
3. Most mid-range drivers, even if they are as large as some smaller subs, are generally not designed to generate the lower sub-range frequencies. The low end roll-off are either early/sharp, or gets rather choppy and not smooth. You need to qualify they properly, before you press them into doing subwoofer duty.
I'm hoping the OP just used the wrong term, and not actually doing what I think he's doing.
I wasn't looking for more bass but more vocals and the mid range speakers filled that space with my sub box
While I agree with most of what you are saying, if you use the picture you posted as a guide without first understanding (measuring) what your frequency response looks like, most people will not be able to achieve good results unless they have a very good ear. There are some cheap phone apps available that use the built in mics in your phone to measure your frequency response. While not the best or most accurate method it will give you a general idea of what you are hearing and my help you identify trouble areas. A better option if you want to get more serious about it, is to pickup a calibrated USB mic, learn how to use the free software REW, and take some moving mic average measurements.for more vocals, you need to boost/cut the right frequencies. i use the Poweramp music app to play stored music on my phone using Android Auto, and it has a 16 (20?) band EQ that i can adjust to make the HK system sound really good. if you're a "streamer", your app may or may not have an EQ you can adjust.
as was said before, the factory subs are crossed over at a very low frequency ( ~43Hz) - anything above that gets attenuated and is essentially filtered out. if you boost the lower bass frequencies (30-80HZ), they will start to come into the mix.
FWIW, the HK system is very trebly to my ears. i tend to cut the treble and midrange a lot in the car's tone control, then add stuff back in Poweramp's EQ.
its really just trial and error until your ears are happy.
View attachment 90031
While I agree with most of what you are saying, if you use the picture you posted as a guide without first understanding (measuring) what your frequency response looks like, most people will not be able to achieve good results unless they have a very good ear. There are some cheap phone apps available that use the built in mics in your phone to measure your frequency response. While not the best or most accurate method it will give you a general idea of what you are hearing and my help you identify trouble areas. A better option if you want to get more serious about it, is to pickup a calibrated USB mic, learn how to use the free software REW, and take some moving mic average measurements.
I use poweramp equalizer with aawireless 2 to stream with android auto, so poweramp works pretty darn goodfor more vocals, you need to boost/cut the right frequencies. i use the Poweramp music app to play stored music on my phone using Android Auto, and it has a 16 (20?) band EQ that i can adjust to make the HK system sound really good. if you're a "streamer", your app may or may not have an EQ you can adjust.
as was said before, the factory subs are crossed over at a very low frequency ( ~43Hz) - anything above that gets attenuated and is essentially filtered out. if you boost the lower bass frequencies (30-80HZ), they will start to come into the mix.
FWIW, the HK system is very trebly to my ears. i tend to cut the treble and midrange a lot in the car's tone control, then add stuff back in Poweramp's EQ.
its really just trial and error until your ears are happy.
View attachment 90031
Good read good InformationThere is so much wrong with the premise of the thread...
The sound that subwoofers play are very low frequency (typically considered <80Hz). At those low freq's, the wave lengths are so long, the subwoofer cones are not really emitting sound waves, so much as they compress (and decompress) the air volume inside the cabin. There are two implications to this:
1. If you want the most out of your auto-sound subs, you should always close ALL your windows and sunroofs. The enclosed air volume inside the car cabin allows the subwoofers to compress the air much more effectively. This is known as acoustic room gain. Done well, this can achieve as much as 6-9db gain in your sub-bass frequencies.
2. The very low frequencies are effectively non-directional, which is why you can pretty much put the sub drivers anywhere. Again, they only generate sound PRESSURE, not really emit sound waves that propagate linearly and directionally. The flip side of this is that the higher the frequency, the more directional the sound waves become. Typically above about 120Hz, most listeners can start to locate the source of the sound pressure. By the time you get into human voice range (> 1k Hz), human ear can very easily directionally pin-point the sound source. So... you DO NOT want to stuff your mid-range drivers under your seat. That will screw up your stereo image. In fact, if you want the optimum front soundstage, the front midranges need to be phase-coupled to the tweeters they are cross-overed with. That usually means - at the very least - they need to be in close proximity to each other. Driver placement gets far more nuanced than that, but suffice it to say... stuffing mid-range drivers under your seats are about as dumb as it gets.
3. Most mid-range drivers, even if they are as large as some smaller subs, are generally not designed to generate the lower sub-range frequencies. The low end roll-off are either early/sharp, or gets rather choppy and not smooth. You need to qualify they properly, before you press them into doing subwoofer duty.
I'm hoping the OP just used the wrong term, and not actually doing what I think he's doing.