Built in Equalizer
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
Built in Equalizer
Hello,
I have looked through some of the posts and see that there is an EQ that you can bypass. Most people seem to have trouble with changing out the speakers and havin too much treble.
My problem is that when listening to the radio it has too much bass. I removed the stock sub and put in an infinity Basslink. I get it adjusted and sounding great with CDs then when I switch to the radio the sub almost makes my head explode!
Questions:
1) Does the EQ do one ting for the radio and another for the CD?
2) Does anyone else have an aftermarket sub hooked up that sees the same problem
3) Has anyone bypassed the EQ just for an aftermarket sub (not main speakers)?
Thanks much,
Scott
I have looked through some of the posts and see that there is an EQ that you can bypass. Most people seem to have trouble with changing out the speakers and havin too much treble.
My problem is that when listening to the radio it has too much bass. I removed the stock sub and put in an infinity Basslink. I get it adjusted and sounding great with CDs then when I switch to the radio the sub almost makes my head explode!
Questions:
1) Does the EQ do one ting for the radio and another for the CD?
2) Does anyone else have an aftermarket sub hooked up that sees the same problem
3) Has anyone bypassed the EQ just for an aftermarket sub (not main speakers)?
Thanks much,
Scott
#2
Guest
Posts: n/a
the radio always has lots more bass then cds b/c they (the radio station), boost the signal and the lower band freq. I dont know why, my best guess is that, most people dont have seperate subs so getting to much bass is not a problem. and its always easier to turn the bass then turn it up w/o getting muddy. Most bypass switches on eqs turn the whole eq off, so basically its default. You need a multi channel eq. But you may need to change major equipment around to do that, all depends on what you got
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DiamondJoeQuimby
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09-10-2015 11:40 AM