28hz home theater sub
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All Comments (31)
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@MakeLuvNotKids In a ported enclosure it will have an almost a verticle rolloff...
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@KingRadicalPhil just because the sub is tuned to 28hz doesnt mean it wont play 22hz or lower. It will just have different drop off slop than a different tune.
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@aaronchungrulez actual it's about 120 or more also that's actual high bass must be lower 40hz or less. -_-
It needs to HIT not jerk off like a lil pussy.
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Extremely low-bass is only part of the equation.
When a kick drum hits, the impact and realism is not primarily dependent on 100Hz and below (which is just a deep rumble).
It's more on the mid-bass.
Sub-bass is merely the foundation for the entire audio reproduction and that low rumbling merely gives music its "backbone" and excitement, making it sound fuller.
A major part of the "thwack!' and "slam! 's Realism and Dynamics comes from the mid-bass....not the sub-bass.
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lol 60 hz is low maybe for some computer speakers like those ligh end logitechs. but they only cost $100, so they sound like they cost $100 lol
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that sub is sweet, what jl-audio model is it?
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sweet, cant w8t untill i get my baby boxed and plugged
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punch? thats shit man
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W-0
Wow are you dumb 28 hertz isn't to high for a home theater sub. Anything over 60hz is to high for a home theater. Oh by the way don't talk unless you know what you are talking about. Noob
alert Fredmulegun is a noob
KingRadicalPhil 3 years ago 9
low is 22 hz by my Home Theater degree in the hand book it says a sub that pushes 22 or below is a sub ideal for home theater my subwoofer is a 10 hz subwoofer with dual 18 inch downfiring drivers coupled to a 1300 watt amp peak 2600 watt's
KingRadicalPhil 3 years ago 6