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What to do. Please help a mate
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<blockquote data-quote="20 hz bass machine" data-source="post: 8688801" data-attributes="member: 678131"><p>I have done a ton of research for you to better help you with this project. One thing I found is that your head unit only has front, rear, and sub. I'm also not sure what type of crossover control you have with this head unit. That being said, and I don't know how others on this forum will feel about this, I think the best plan may be to replace the rear speakers as well, because you already have the amp. It breaks down like this, if you get a component set and hook up the tweeters to the front channel and the door speakers to the rear, as far as I can tell, you won't have much control of what frequencies are going where. This is a big problem because tweeters are sensitive to low frequencies. In my opinion the better plan is get the component set and use the supplied crossover. This will put both the tweeter and speaker on 1 channel (left and right front so really 2 channels but you get what I mean) leaving you with another channel, in this case the rear channel, to work with. If I were you I'd find a set of decent coaxial speakers to put in the rear. Putting speakers in the front and rear isnt technically the ideal way to get the best sound quality but it will still sound good and there is a chance you will like it more than if you only went with front stage despite the fact that front stage is better for sound quality. I did this on accident (dont ask) once back in one of my first builds and loved how it sounded. With all that said I'm going to attach a picture of a rough diagram that I drew to help you further visualize what I'm talking about. [ATTACH=full]19440[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="20 hz bass machine, post: 8688801, member: 678131"] I have done a ton of research for you to better help you with this project. One thing I found is that your head unit only has front, rear, and sub. I'm also not sure what type of crossover control you have with this head unit. That being said, and I don't know how others on this forum will feel about this, I think the best plan may be to replace the rear speakers as well, because you already have the amp. It breaks down like this, if you get a component set and hook up the tweeters to the front channel and the door speakers to the rear, as far as I can tell, you won't have much control of what frequencies are going where. This is a big problem because tweeters are sensitive to low frequencies. In my opinion the better plan is get the component set and use the supplied crossover. This will put both the tweeter and speaker on 1 channel (left and right front so really 2 channels but you get what I mean) leaving you with another channel, in this case the rear channel, to work with. If I were you I'd find a set of decent coaxial speakers to put in the rear. Putting speakers in the front and rear isnt technically the ideal way to get the best sound quality but it will still sound good and there is a chance you will like it more than if you only went with front stage despite the fact that front stage is better for sound quality. I did this on accident (dont ask) once back in one of my first builds and loved how it sounded. With all that said I'm going to attach a picture of a rough diagram that I drew to help you further visualize what I'm talking about. [ATTACH type="full"]19440[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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