Simplified: the lower the Hz on the crossover the more bass, the higher you set it the more likely you’re “not” going to be filtering out the mid’s (allowing them to come through) and you’ll start to hear vocals.
The last one he show’s is a “reverb” setting: you always want that off. The first question is the low frequency cutoff. This should be set in the highest position and controlled by the crossover in the amp. If the amp doesn’t have a crossover control you’d want it to be set in the lowest position.
s rtrv is sound retriever (i think) all it does is amplify certain tones for different types of music. For the Hz go around 80 and for the plus and minus it is your bass gain on your deck for the woofer volume.
set it to the recomended hz operating range for the sub
407Ford1 10 months ago
Simplified: the lower the Hz on the crossover the more bass, the higher you set it the more likely you’re “not” going to be filtering out the mid’s (allowing them to come through) and you’ll start to hear vocals.
wfofz1 10 months ago
The last one he show’s is a “reverb” setting: you always want that off. The first question is the low frequency cutoff. This should be set in the highest position and controlled by the crossover in the amp. If the amp doesn’t have a crossover control you’d want it to be set in the lowest position.
wfofz1 10 months ago
s rtrv is sound retriever (i think) all it does is amplify certain tones for different types of music. For the Hz go around 80 and for the plus and minus it is your bass gain on your deck for the woofer volume.
CarefullySleek 11 months ago