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Junior Varsity
DBX Venu 360 Opinions
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<blockquote data-quote="Mike Caldwell" data-source="post: 147952" data-attributes="member: 170"><p>Re: DBX Venu 360 Opinions</p><p></p><p>I am in the process of upgrading my system with Venu360's, six in all.</p><p>I bought one first to try it out before making the plunge.</p><p></p><p>They sound good, easy to program, I did most of it wireless with my Android tablet, the app works good.</p><p>In a test I beat on the inputs hard and it did not up and puke till I got really crazy. The three by six routing</p><p>is perfect for a subs on aux preset.</p><p></p><p>Inside they have very clean lay, separate switching power supply, not part of the main processing board.</p><p>On the main board it was kind of interesting to see that some of chips next to the ADA converters are mounted close to</p><p>the converters and at a 45 degree angle. I figure it's either to make for the shortest point to point path between them</p><p>or at the 45 degree angle it nulls out some interference between the two, or maybe it's for both reasons.</p><p></p><p>With setting the driver offset delays, a couple quick EQ notches on the band pass output PEQ's and using steeper crossover slopes my various systems sounded better than ever.</p><p></p><p>I want to add that I did find with the limiters in the "Peak Stop" mode you could get a clicking sound when hitting the limit threshold and the overshoot setting set in the lower range.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mike Caldwell, post: 147952, member: 170"] Re: DBX Venu 360 Opinions I am in the process of upgrading my system with Venu360's, six in all. I bought one first to try it out before making the plunge. They sound good, easy to program, I did most of it wireless with my Android tablet, the app works good. In a test I beat on the inputs hard and it did not up and puke till I got really crazy. The three by six routing is perfect for a subs on aux preset. Inside they have very clean lay, separate switching power supply, not part of the main processing board. On the main board it was kind of interesting to see that some of chips next to the ADA converters are mounted close to the converters and at a 45 degree angle. I figure it's either to make for the shortest point to point path between them or at the 45 degree angle it nulls out some interference between the two, or maybe it's for both reasons. With setting the driver offset delays, a couple quick EQ notches on the band pass output PEQ's and using steeper crossover slopes my various systems sounded better than ever. I want to add that I did find with the limiters in the "Peak Stop" mode you could get a clicking sound when hitting the limit threshold and the overshoot setting set in the lower range. [/QUOTE]
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