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Old June 21st 04, 08:09 AM
Radio Man
 
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Default Too Much Bass On The Speaker

I recently connected an 8" speaker with a 2" tweeter in
a baffle to my receiver. The audio is much improved
except there is too much bass. Is there a practical fix
for this?


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Old June 21st 04, 09:30 AM
James Boyk
 
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So little info makes this tough to answer. The 8" is on an open baffle (no
sides, no back)? Are you sitting close to it? Move it a couple feet farther
away. Turn down the bass control. Put a capacitor across the 8" speaker to cut
everything below say 100 Hz, or even 200 Hz; for calculations see appropriate
web sites. Move the speaker farther from the wall (if it's close).

Your question is just too vague.

James Boyk

**

Radio Man wrote:

I recently connected an 8" speaker with a 2" tweeter in
a baffle to my receiver. The audio is much improved
except there is too much bass. Is there a practical fix
for this?


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Old June 21st 04, 03:53 PM
Art Harris
 
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James Boyk wrote:

a capacitor across the 8" speaker to cut
everything below say 100 Hz, or even 200 Hz; for calculations see appropriate
web sites.


Putting a capacitor across the speaker will cut the high frequencies,
not the lows.

My guess is that there's not enough highs either because of a narrow
IF filter or a restricted audio amp.

Art N2AH
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Old June 21st 04, 05:58 PM
electronicdx
 
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Radio Man,

Try to limit what you put through a shortwave radio receiver, most
receivers in that catagory are just classified as seperate tuners, if I had a
communications receiver like yours I would use a seperate amplifier
with equalizer to customize your audio settings. An equalizer
works to filter out certian non desired audio frequencies to
suit your listening tastes. Please use your communications
receiver like a seperate tuner, cause shortwave receivers have
woefully poor quality audio amps, which are only good for small "tiny"
communication " wide range " speakers, like background "muzak" speakers


Most speakers like yours have a cross over inside, and need a amp
to control whats being put through them.

What I wish that communication receiver builders do, is make a
communications seperate amplifier with bass and treble controls with also DSP
filters for large stereo speakers. Also MFJ makes a speech
enhancer that you can connect between your tuner to your seperate
amplifier, and if you want add a equalizer. Capacitors are good
for also but you will need the right non polarized axial lead
capacitor, but they are only good only for crossover designs.

Ok, Here are your sources for your good audio equipment

http://www.crutchfield.com : Audio Amps and Tape Decks, MD, Speakers
http://www.jandr.com : Audio Amps and Tape Decks, MD, Speakers
http://www.bestbuy.com : Audio Amps and Tape Decks, Speakers, PC's
http://www.radioshack.com : Budget Amps and Parts and Accessories
http://www.mfjenterprises.com : Speech Enhancer and Communications Speakers
http://www.rffun.com : DSP filters.

73s

"Radio Man" wrote in message ...
I recently connected an 8" speaker with a 2" tweeter in
a baffle to my receiver. The audio is much improved
except there is too much bass. Is there a practical fix
for this?

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Old June 21st 04, 06:38 PM
David
 
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Default

My Drake R8B has no problem driving a 10'' speaker to room filling
volume.

I'd suggest the Cambridge PC Works for your listening enjoyment if
your radio lacks audio authority.

They have a seperate subwoofer (with level control) that can be
located under your desk and a wired remote volume control.

http://www.cambridgesoundworks.com/s...z& type=store



On 21 Jun 2004 09:58:38 -0700,
(electronicdx) wrote:

Radio Man,

Try to limit what you put through a shortwave radio receiver, most
receivers in that catagory are just classified as seperate tuners, if I had a
communications receiver like yours I would use a seperate amplifier
with equalizer to customize your audio settings. An equalizer
works to filter out certian non desired audio frequencies to
suit your listening tastes. Please use your communications
receiver like a seperate tuner, cause shortwave receivers have
woefully poor quality audio amps, which are only good for small "tiny"
communication " wide range " speakers, like background "muzak" speakers


Most speakers like yours have a cross over inside, and need a amp
to control whats being put through them.

What I wish that communication receiver builders do, is make a
communications seperate amplifier with bass and treble controls with also DSP
filters for large stereo speakers. Also MFJ makes a speech
enhancer that you can connect between your tuner to your seperate
amplifier, and if you want add a equalizer. Capacitors are good
for also but you will need the right non polarized axial lead
capacitor, but they are only good only for crossover designs.

Ok, Here are your sources for your good audio equipment

http://www.crutchfield.com : Audio Amps and Tape Decks, MD, Speakers
http://www.jandr.com : Audio Amps and Tape Decks, MD, Speakers
http://www.bestbuy.com : Audio Amps and Tape Decks, Speakers, PC's
http://www.radioshack.com : Budget Amps and Parts and Accessories
http://www.mfjenterprises.com : Speech Enhancer and Communications Speakers
http://www.rffun.com : DSP filters.

73s

"Radio Man" wrote in message ...
I recently connected an 8" speaker with a 2" tweeter in
a baffle to my receiver. The audio is much improved
except there is too much bass. Is there a practical fix
for this?




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Old June 21st 04, 07:06 PM
James Boyk
 
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of course you're right. i meant a cap in series. -james boyk

**

Art Harris wrote:
Putting a capacitor across the speaker will cut the high frequencies,
not the lows.


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Old June 22nd 04, 04:59 AM
Gray Shockley
 
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On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 02:09:37 -0500, Radio Man wrote
(in article ):

I recently connected an 8" speaker with a 2" tweeter in
a baffle to my receiver. The audio is much improved
except there is too much bass. Is there a practical fix
for this?



Pad on the woofer/mid range?

++ Gray //


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Old June 22nd 04, 05:29 AM
Ken
 
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Next time dry the Bass off before putting it on your speaker! ;-)

"Gray Shockley" wrote in message
news
On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 02:09:37 -0500, Radio Man wrote
(in article ):

I recently connected an 8" speaker with a 2" tweeter in
a baffle to my receiver. The audio is much improved
except there is too much bass. Is there a practical fix
for this?



Pad on the woofer/mid range?

++ Gray //




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Old June 22nd 04, 04:12 PM
H. Dziardziel
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 07:09:37 GMT, "Radio Man"
wrote:

I recently connected an 8" speaker with a 2" tweeter in
a baffle to my receiver. The audio is much improved
except there is too much bass. Is there a practical fix
for this?



My guess is it could be due to a combination of woofer (8")
resonance and under damping (high amplifier dc resistance).
Making it free standing, varying the height off the floor, not
placing in a corner or on a shelf or desk and other physical
orientations can change the room-speaker resonance dramatically
sometimes.

Stuffing fiber glass etc into the enclosure will dampen it as will
closing any enclosure ports (it could make it worse too).
Lifting the speaker off its baffle a bit (spacers) or completely
out will change the resonance a lot

The least efficient way is to try various inductors in parallel
with the 8" Try a 6, 12V secondary with and without a core or a
cheap woofer crossover coil.

Then there's adding negative feedback etc.

All in all it's proably easiest to just get another smaller
speaker.
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Old June 22nd 04, 05:16 PM
Gray Shockley
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 23:29:07 -0500, Ken wrote
(in article ):

Next time dry the Bass off before putting it on your speaker! ;-)


Heck, I didn't even de-scale it.

++ Same Guy //



"Gray Shockley" wrote in message
news
On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 02:09:37 -0500, Radio Man wrote
(in article ):

I recently connected an 8" speaker with a 2" tweeter in
a baffle to my receiver. The audio is much improved
except there is too much bass. Is there a practical fix
for this?



Pad on the woofer/mid range?

++ Gray //






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