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Post by jmilton on Apr 9, 2020 19:28:26 GMT -5
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Post by markc on Apr 10, 2020 3:37:25 GMT -5
Half the signal voltage equates to 6dB (6dB volume increase equals a doubling of sound pressure) Turning the subwoofer amp volume up 6 dB should compensate for for it getting an RCA input and the main speakers getting XLR Couldn't this potentially lead to clipping though? No - Not if your Subwoofer has enough headroom to drive your room Clipping would occur if you turned the XMC / RMC OUTPUT trims up by 6dB to equalise the sub to mains An alternative within the SSP would be to decrease the output signal trims of all the other channels by 6dB and leave the sub alone
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Post by nesadik on Jul 23, 2020 14:27:30 GMT -5
First of all, I want to warn you, you don't need to think of subwoofers as speakers. When it comes to cables, be sure to check all the inputs and outputs before connecting, because speaker cables are very, important because they carry a signal that propagates to all frequencies. But when it comes to some loose cables, this is just a low frequency signal, so you don't need a high quality cable to connect, but you still need a good shielded cable so you don't get unwanted noise in your subwoofer. I bought a subwoofer cable yesterday, after reviewing the TreeThugger subwoofer cable selection before buying and choosing a cable that is properly shielded and that cable is a quality product that will work as expected.
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