seinbeans Posted October 7, 2019 Author Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 3 hours ago, AaronT said: If you're not messing with us. I apologise. There ya go, you just said it yourself. A certain x-over point in a given driver or Tweeter sounds better to you . It's all about user preference. Our preference doesn't class certain frequencies into a given categorie. This here is the standard list audio spectrum 0-19hz - sub Sonic 20-60hz - sub bass 60-250hz - bass 250-500hz - low mid-range (mid bass, etc) 500-2khz - mid-range 2khz-4khz - upper mid-range 4khz-6khz - presence 6khz-20+khz - brilliance Regardless of what type of driver reproduces said frequencies or how it reproduces frequencies doesn't change where the frequencies fall in the audio spectrum. The only thing that the former is representative of is how the driver is made or it's intended purpose I encourage you to stick around and learn. We all start somewhere some of us start with a looser grasp of this than others. But we all have a common bond AUDIOPHILLIA. even our most knowledgeable members are still in the learning process, albeit at a more refined and advanced way, but no one is the mecca of this. Also that being said a speaker is a very very inefficient tool to reproduce sound 20-60hz is sub bass well that means my 5 inch bookshelf speaker is good at playing sub bass cuz my bookshelf speakers goes to 48 hertz yeah my sound system sounds very flat with 48 hertz crossover setting but the bass is bumping more with a 65 hertz crossover setting Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
seinbeans Posted October 7, 2019 Author Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 15 hours ago, AaronT said: If you're not messing with us. I apologise. There ya go, you just said it yourself. A certain x-over point in a given driver or Tweeter sounds better to you . It's all about user preference. Our preference doesn't class certain frequencies into a given categorie. This here is the standard list audio spectrum 0-19hz - sub Sonic 20-60hz - sub bass 60-250hz - bass 250-500hz - low mid-range (mid bass, etc) 500-2khz - mid-range 2khz-4khz - upper mid-range 4khz-6khz - presence 6khz-20+khz - brilliance Regardless of what type of driver reproduces said frequencies or how it reproduces frequencies doesn't change where the frequencies fall in the audio spectrum. The only thing that the former is representative of is how the driver is made or it's intended purpose I encourage you to stick around and learn. We all start somewhere some of us start with a looser grasp of this than others. But we all have a common bond AUDIOPHILLIA. even our most knowledgeable members are still in the learning process, albeit at a more refined and advanced way, but no one is the mecca of this. Also that being said a speaker is a very very inefficient tool to reproduce sound I still think 48 hertz is mid range since the 48 hertz sounds like mid range sound when the 48 hertz is playing on my 5 inch bookshelf speakers so 48 hertz has to be mid range sound Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ToNasty Posted October 7, 2019 Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 It's not ***Super Sellers List***http://www.stevemeadedesigns.com/board/topic/25829-super-sellers-buyers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AaronT Posted October 7, 2019 Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 2 hours ago, seinbeans said: I still think 48 hertz is mid range since the 48 hertz sounds like mid range sound when the 48 hertz is playing on my 5 inch bookshelf speakers so 48 hertz has to be mid range sound The reason why 48 sounds like mid-range on your book shelf speakers is because they are not designed to play 48 well. There not enough XMECH or enclosure volume to reproduce 48 hz tones true to thier nature. Also, there very well may be an internal passive crossover in those bookshelf speakers that is cutting off the majority of the 48 hz tone and only letting a very very little of it through. This brings me back to my original thought of you trolling us. We, laid out factual information that is science, it's literally science. We spoke to you in a very friendly yet stern manner and reached out to hep you get a better understanding of what you want to know. Yet you rebute with "I still think it's mid-range" because of some totally incorrect logical conclusion you've made up in your mind. That's the definition of trolling tactics. We didn't bite the bait earlier like you were hoping to get someone to freak out and start flaming. Instead we took the latter route and decided to present education info best we can. You then take said info and completely disregard it and start original comment over again in another attempt to troll. It's the equivalent of joining a Chevy Camaro enthusiast forum and posting a thread with a title like this "Man I just got smoked by a 89 Ford escort in my SBC 383 Camaro" Ya dig? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AaronT Posted October 7, 2019 Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 3 topics started all in regards to either 66hz 48hz being mid-range. Or the third is about your bookshelf speakers producing the best bass in the world. You didn't eat enough response in regards to 66hz troll post being mid-range, so you kicked it up s notch to 48hz being mid-range. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AaronT Posted October 7, 2019 Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 Hamburgers taste like chicken, so that makes cows really just big chickens Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ToNasty Posted October 7, 2019 Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 1 hour ago, AaronT said: 3 topics started all in regards to either 66hz 48hz being mid-range. Or the third is about your bookshelf speakers producing the best bass in the world. You didn't eat enough response in regards to 66hz troll post being mid-range, so you kicked it up s notch to 48hz being mid-range. Ypu also have to take in account the bookshelf speakers are in an enclosure. Not IB so that changes everything ***Super Sellers List***http://www.stevemeadedesigns.com/board/topic/25829-super-sellers-buyers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
seinbeans Posted October 7, 2019 Author Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 3 hours ago, AaronT said: The reason why 48 sounds like mid-range on your book shelf speakers is because they are not designed to play 48 well. There not enough XMECH or enclosure volume to reproduce 48 hz tones true to thier nature. Also, there very well may be an internal passive crossover in those bookshelf speakers that is cutting off the majority of the 48 hz tone and only letting a very very little of it through. This brings me back to my original thought of you trolling us. We, laid out factual information that is science, it's literally science. We spoke to you in a very friendly yet stern manner and reached out to hep you get a better understanding of what you want to know. Yet you rebute with "I still think it's mid-range" because of some totally incorrect logical conclusion you've made up in your mind. That's the definition of trolling tactics. We didn't bite the bait earlier like you were hoping to get someone to freak out and start flaming. Instead we took the latter route and decided to present education info best we can. You then take said info and completely disregard it and start original comment over again in another attempt to troll. It's the equivalent of joining a Chevy Camaro enthusiast forum and posting a thread with a title like this "Man I just got smoked by a 89 Ford escort in my SBC 383 Camaro" Ya dig? I can hear the sound where my 5 inch bookshelf speaker and subwoofer connecting so this means my 5 inch bookshelf speaker makes 48 hertz frequency perfectly Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ToNasty Posted October 7, 2019 Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 23 minutes ago, seinbeans said: I can hear the sound where my 5 inch bookshelf speaker and subwoofer connecting so this means my 5 inch bookshelf speaker makes 48 hertz frequency perfectly Have you ran an rta? If not you dont know it "makes 48 Hertz frequency perfectly" ***Super Sellers List***http://www.stevemeadedesigns.com/board/topic/25829-super-sellers-buyers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
seinbeans Posted October 7, 2019 Author Report Share Posted October 7, 2019 34 minutes ago, ToNasty said: Have you ran an rta? If not you dont know it "makes 48 Hertz frequency perfectly" well the website of my bookshelf speaker say the frequency response is 48 hertz to 20 kilohertz https://www.mtx.com/monitor5i-bookshelf-loudspeaker and I tested the bookshelf speakers my bookshelf speakers makes the 48 hertz perfectly Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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