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Is sound at lower Hz, a more elongated sine wave (long and skinny, with gradual ups and downs)

and at a higher hz, more compact (lots of waves, with quick ups and downs)

The reason i ask is because lower bass seems to make my sub pound slower/ move less then higher bass notes, so i figured it might have something to do with the sound/sine wave??

Or am i just completely wrong on this subject?

1998 Ford Ranger 4x4 4.0

Pioneer 3200UB Head Unit

AQ1200D

AQ HDC3 18 Copper Coils

6 Cubes tuned to 35 Hz (Temporary)

Knu 1/0, 2/0 Welding

Treo SSX100.b

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Frequency (hz) is how many cycles per alotted time. So the lower the frequency the less cycles per measure is seen. So yes it moves slower

Edited by Symmetry9898

Build in progress:

Kenwood DNX890HD

Rockford Fosgate White wolf RCA's

2 Rockford Fosgate T400.4 on RF fanatic q components (6.5 in the kick, 6.5 in the front doors, 5.25 in rear doors)
2 Rockford Fosgate T2500's on sub

1 Fi car audio Team 15 D1

XS Power D3400 and three D975's in the rear

Mechman Elite 370

Stinger power connections and cable

RockFord_Fosgate-1-1.png

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