
EQ fixes OTops, period. Not they are broken to begin with, but all pro sound speakers NEED EQ. Of course, this assumes that both your tops are built the same, are air-tight, etc.
Flattening out subwoofer response by proper application of active filters will provide an equally religious experience.miked wrote:EQ fixes OTops, period. Not they are broken to begin with, but all pro sound speakers NEED EQ.
Yes, have been using it to control the tweets, but still not happy.byacey wrote:Do you have a HF shelving EQ in the parametric?
An L-pad is for reducing the volume afaik. I currently have a 3.9Ω resistor on the + line just before the tweets (as per instructions)... should I just put in a bigger resistor here (/or another in series) to increase the attenuation? This is the way I have been thinking of going as it is the most elegant solution. Is an L-pad any different to this setup or is it just the fancy name for it? Should I use noise (pink/white?) in order to test the balance between the two? Haven't tried that yet and that could well get things close to where they should be. At the moment, I think that I am so far off, I am undercorrecting and then overcorrecting, then overrecorrecting, and then finally re-anti-over-correcting!byacey wrote:I would put an L-pad on the HF crossover until you get the desired attenuation in balancing the highs with the mids. The less EQ required, the better.
Didn't know about the phase shift thing. Intresting to know this (I love all the theory stuffbyacey wrote:Too much EQ isn't a good thing as it creates unnecessary phase shift. I've been skeptical of the results after using auto EQ in the Driverack PA; sometimes one band will end up almost full boost, while the adjacent band is almost full cut.
You can't use an LPad with a piezo array.byacey wrote: An L pad will allow you to tame the output of the tweeters
If you change the load impedance you also will have to change the filter L/C component values, which will only deliver the desired filter response with the resistor values of the standard filter. That's probably beyond the ability of the OP.byacey wrote:No? Why not? As long as your parallel load resistor is in place to simulate a low impedance load, an L pad will work fine. It's simply a voltage divider.
LPads don't come in 30 ohm.byacey wrote:That's the whole point of using an L-pad, it maintains a constant load impedance with respect to the crossover.
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