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Dynamic speaker processing
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<blockquote data-quote="Brian Bolly" data-source="post: 211925" data-attributes="member: 32"><p>Urban legend, at least with the Meyer stuff - there was never any "sliding crossover". Could the different bandpasses go into limit independently? Yes. Would doing so make it sound as if the crossover point was moving? Yes, of course - the acoustic crossover would be moving if one passband could get louder but the other stayed static. But electronically the crossover was fixed. And any other speaker/processor that did this, new or old, would have the same effect.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brian Bolly, post: 211925, member: 32"] Urban legend, at least with the Meyer stuff - there was never any "sliding crossover". Could the different bandpasses go into limit independently? Yes. Would doing so make it sound as if the crossover point was moving? Yes, of course - the acoustic crossover would be moving if one passband could get louder but the other stayed static. But electronically the crossover was fixed. And any other speaker/processor that did this, new or old, would have the same effect. [/QUOTE]
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